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Show OGDEN DAILY COMMERC IAL. OGDEN, UTAH. FBI DA V MORNING, AUGUST 7, 1891. VOLUME V. NUMBER 109. A FEARFLL D1SA mart that the czarrwiteh did out exhibit much bmwT La running sway when be Particular offecae w mac taken at the statement in the prusce t published letter that after the czare vitch bad b-struck ana wtue ne was eodenvoricg to make hi escape from Lia assailant, b tumhiad to the ground through sheer fright. a.itkL n A Freight Telescoped by a Pas-sende- r Train. INTERNATIONAL Labor Congress. LABOR. BactEX, August 6. Tbe Brussels it u international Ubor congress, or called the international social iet work men's cocgrees. w ill assemble here the 16th inst The meeting will be largely itteoded and important Norway, Sweden, Holland, France, Germaay, Austria, Switzerland, Hungary, Spain, and Ita'y will send delegates, while for the first time in the history of labor movements Poland will be represented. A contingent from the United States ic likew ise expected. Among the subjects to lie discussed will be the proposal to hold the next international congress id Chicago in ls03. PALMER OF NOTE proving more explicitly be given M eolJ.ers in govemrjject apooimmetts and employ- n etiL l ne vexed "raoe problem" rkiiia up in the eocarn.tDOCt this afternoon and aseff-Uvlsttled fur all time. i ue Gpecuu of tbe euro raoe was ex Cong ressman William Wrner,of eooimandrr-in-chitf- , and Mjouri, be is loturLt reowvimr the tribute of colored eauae veterans, whose be so eloQueuctlv eeuoused- - The matter came before the con vention w hen arner, as chairman of the committee. preto-ecc- lOKU'SVIEWS OF UTAH y The G. A. R. Elec ts a New Com- - THE COLOR LINE DRAWN. The Xtn Good Enough to Stand Be tween the Fla? and its Enemies Is Good Enough. Detroit, Aug. 6. What He Think eultutal pt niander-in-Chie- f. u Prine Georre Did Sot Submit His Manuscript for Revision and to Got Into Trouble. vid statutes PRICE FIVE CENTS. Immediately after on the commander-in-fhier- a rtv omoiendBtiona, presented the following report: Your committee has carefully Considered the clear and frank state- meets of the eommander-in-chieregarding the difficulties existing between posts in the departments of Louisiana and Mideiasippi. The committee has atso considered all documents submitted to ana arguments made before it as to the causes leading to the existing trouble in those departments. Old post from one to eight inclusive in tbe department of Louisiana and Mississippi are composed of white comrades. ew posts, from nine to seventeen in elusive are composed of colored com rades. Ihe contention is that the latter poet are taunted with fraud in their organization. The rem, edy suggested of a separate depart ment of concurrent jurisdiction tor ooiorea veterans involves an amend ment to our rules and regulations. During that tierce struggle for theiifeot the Nation we stood shoulder to shoulder as comrades tried and true, and it is too late to divide on the color Una The man who is good enough to stand between the flag and these who would destroy it w hen the fate of the Nation is tremblinir in tbe balance, is good enough to be tbe comrade in any department of ihe Grand No different Army or the Republic rules has been or ever shall be reorganized by the survivors of the Union army and navy. No department should be es tablished for any color or nationality, Mr. Decker defended his minority report in a speech of some length. He dwelt on race distinctions in the south and said if we do not settle the Question now it will be here continually cntil set tled according to the condition of affairs found in Louisiana, Mississippi and other Bouinern states, waj. Warner said when tbeae black men and white men ehoul dered a musket in the defense of the Union it was not a question of etiquette "r Buuiuuiuij uui patriotism aua loyalty. The black men fought for the flag that f of the Arri- Land's. IIIS IDEAS MAINLY Terr Good Possibilities EIGHT. of Utah in Soil Product Write-U- p and ReMiurcea. ard They use timothy bay, red-to- p ilJ hay, but the erei hay crop is ai falfa or luoern, whu h is a peck of elov er, looking at a distance some bat l.ke our red clover. Its growth is very rapid and the yield Ure. The usual rule is to cut three crops in one season from the same pitof laud. A crop will if Id three tons to the acre at the fcrvt cutting and a little less at the eeooDd and third cutting each, so that eight tons to the e at tbe three cuttings is not unusual in one season. Thu make as good hay as the clover in the'st&tf s and dues not teem to exhautt tbv bnd very much. This variety of grass ha revolutionized the keeping of horses and eattle in Utah, There are eiht large valleys in thia many small enea. The Territory lnvan, the bait Lake, the ban IVt. the Cache, Utah, Tooele and Ojfdeo va.le; are among tbe largest. I am in clined to think that when they learn bow to utilize all tl water at their command for irrigating purposes there will be more productive agricultural land ia Utah than in the entire six New lia-glastatea first settled by the Preiu-itiv- e Fathers. There are now over 20U,- 0.0 people in this territory. The child is already born who may live to see i,- OO.'OO people living in those moun tains a vallevs. What may seem to many impossible, the food to sustain them will all be grown on Utah soiL On Wednesday The Commercial the views of printed It G. Ilorr, of Michigan, wno recently sK,ke at the Grand opera house. His eiseert ol Palmer of New York, A. G. ideas of Utah's soil and agricultural proMdwaukee, W. P. Smedbury of Caliducts were given in the same New York n Ohio. fornia, and S. IL Hurst of Tribune article, and are as follows: E. Bryant of Wisconsin placed Tbe Data's Arms. Weieeert in nomination in an ekmuect n is remaraauie now mtie one can Weiseert's nomination was learn of a large state or territory of the Los A kg exes, August 6. Richard L. speech. Trumbull today tiled an answer to the seconded by Illinois, Iowa, Indiana and United States, uuleea be gains his inforlibel on the arms and ammunition seized Krnaaa. mation by traveling through it, examinNew York of Tanner placed Corporal on the steamer I tat a. Trumbull says be Massachuing iU resources, questioning its people, is owner in trust of the arms andammu rainier in nomination, and New Jersey and Pennyslvania sec setts and else one no and has that carefully calculating its possibilities. nition, anything ISDCSTRV l.t ITS I5FASCT. to do with them. Judge Koss is absent onded the nomination. I have just completed a week's work in iinnot J. J. Hollingsworth of Ohio did not visit a single mine in the ter on bis vacation, but on bis return an I down and of most of its Utah, traveling up effort will be made to at once push the ated Hurst, and W. IL It Barnes though there are several valuable California nominated Smedbur. The valleys and through many of its moun ritory, ones. Up to date there have been few litigation to a conclusion. tain paaaee. My evenings have been latter's nomination was seconded by devoted to addressing large industries started outside of ordinary wholly Washington, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, Flood in New Zealand. and mining. The territory is gatherings of the people in an endeavor farming Alaska. New Mexioo and Idaho. to explain the doctrines of IUpubiican producing large quantities of common, Sax Francisco, August 6. Auckland J U6t before the ballot opened S. II ie shipped away in ism and the benefits of Protection. Dur impure salt which advices by the steamer Alameda are to Hurt asked for reooif nition. "The Statbulk by carloads into the mines, and i the effect that a great flood and some of Ohio" said he, believes in justice and ing the day time I bave been busy going used in smelting works in the reduction from one city to another; and I have thing like a tidal wave prevailed at Mel- fair nlav and recognition to all the de tried to keep my eyes open to all t hat of some ores on account of the chlorine bourne on J uly 13th. The waters in tbe partments of the G. A. K. (Applause.) There are a few was going on about me. The week has which salt contains. harbor rose above the level of the sur- It has been conceded for years that Good bricks are made in mills. woolen vesone been of great interest and of conwhenever New York became united on a rounding towns and several email tinual surprises to me. An account of large Quantities in most of the valleys. sels were wrecked. Tbe floods were the candidate, this state which gave more AtLebi, in the Utah valley, about what I bave seen and learned may be of most severe since 1802 and the course of men to the treat army of the union than miles south of Stilt Lake City, interest to the readers or The Tribune. thirty the Yarra river presented a eoene of any other state should be entitled to the of Utah is a territory within an area of there is being started a new industry desolation for miles. In South Rich- commander-in-chieNew York is now Utah. about 85,000 square miles, being a little great promise to the people a ofcost mond, another suburb of Melbourne, united on a candidate and I desire to of are erecting works at whole streets were submerged and 2,000 w ithdraw my name and second the nomi larger in area than tbe six ew Kngland They to manufacture sugar from (500,000 is homeless. com ."ew Business rendered and New York. slates, nation of Palmer of people Jersey Maryland to refine it right there on tbe bined. it is emphatically a country beets and almost suspended in the city and efforts The election was by secret ballot The are planted and now look There spot covered with of wants mountains. There is said are being made to relieve the announcement of tbe first ballot wan acres or sugar beets in tine 2,;J00 very ing to be one the sufferers. The loss of life, it is be P- -' only place in the territory and about LehL Most of the money for far in the lead indicated the where a man can look in any direction ultimate electiou. The lieved, did not exceed ten. industrial enterprise is furwithout seeing a mountain either near this large A schooner, name unknown, d Palmer, 322; Weiseert, 270: nished in the territory. It can only be by or in the distance. That point is on success. Great enthusiasm was peared off Sorrento and is believe Tbe soil is exactly the kind the bank of Sait Lake at its southern which is said have been lost with all hands. manifested by tbe New York delegates to be adapted to raising On the plateau of the Danedenong during the second ballot ana tnougn extremity, looking toward the north into th sweetest to samples of sugar beets. that never, had up across time, Idaho miles of in acres water of earth the an avalanche protected was eighty range fifty Palmer in tbe lead from the start Wwt land is apt to make them grow too but extent swept down the mountain tide, the conclufion was somewhat in doubt him in anything bondage. which lie stretched out in that direction. are not tbe This had better bury There are, however, several large val large; the largest beets engulfing a residence there. The in- until the California delegation changed the organization ones run too much Such sweetest old large Comrades bad flag; The is Penvan to said be to water Where moisture is furnished mates escaped. leys. Valley its entire vote to Palmer. Prolonged The railroads have partly washed out cheering greeted this announnemen better tear the button from their breasts the largest; it is poorly watered and irrigation it can be regulated to suit as our than heads now, are to for twenty miles. A great nn ruber of which meant Smedbury a withdrawal contains only about 4,130 people. The by silvering, the crop. go back to the principles for which we Salt Lake V alley is the next largest sheep are drowned. The estimated total and Palmer's election. The distribution of irrrigating water loss will reach half a million dollars. At traveled its entire length of nearly one from An enthusiastic delegate at this junc bled. iApDlaUse.l the ditches is done by mutual arlast advicse the Murray was rising and ture moved that Palmer s election b de Chief Fairchild; Comrade Northcott of nunurea miles and saw most of its vil rangement between all concerned. Each . Thi iwocoiorec and cities. flooode in t he A IJpu ry $ t$?riet were f eared, lkdajctli4aatiiuv merabera alone is as lages valley spoke tewvrfieaXferV , Mr. large as t&e state or Khode island, and person has just such a time allotted him rftrxit iu mvor ol me maioniv Much sickness pfevaik nst MelbhruS,Tthe wildeet enthusiasm. k ' recounted ' to tap the water and use it If a person 'MTwkacre wee.heftrtrend;na. 'Ihe aoci- or. some has a population of about 100,000. The does commauiranam, to and uouisiana, new the deposits exposure Captain John Palmer, the not take it at bis regular time he i dent occurred at 3 o'clock. When I left attributable trouble of the his of He soil is and of floods. slime left withou but the nder-in-chief, department deep very rich, born on Staten Island by not allowed to use it until his turn the dead end wounded were scattered colored no said had been is for worthless post recognized irrigation March 22nd, 1842, has a splendid war farming pur- conies again. Some use it in the night about on the ground inside of the trucks How is This? record. He served during the war in until recently, when charters were poses. The rains are scant and infre time and some in the day; and then, for and surviving passengers were doing all the by department commander, quent and little vegetation is seen, ex- a York volunteers, granted while, those using it by the day take it St. Locis, August 6. A dispatch from the Ninety-firs- t in allNew they could for the relief of the wounded. its engagements. Since who became offended because members cept the sage brush, which seems to in tbe night The attempt is made to part The victims, so far ae I could see, were the City of Mexioo says: Tho Diraio de taking of order the furefused to attend the have a natural taste for dry, gravelly have all that is needed used as it comes all men who were in the smoking car. Centro America, printed in Guatemala. the war he has been engaged in the neral of Jeff Davis; several hundred lands. None of the passengers in the sleeping claims that the family of the unfortunate fresco painting and decoration business men had been admitted within a few along. Of course large quantities run A NOVEL STYLE OF FARMING. to waste under tho present imperfect Albany, N. Y. Asajnember of the G. cars wereinjured. Uenerai linrrundia, who was killed at and the time was too short to days make comR. was A. several terms How to irrigate these arid lands and methods. In some instances the getting John F. Bow dish of Boston, who had aboard the Pacific mail steamship in the manderhe of Lewfor examination into any their military render them fertile and productive is a of this water from the streams away up-iBenedict post No. 5, and a narrow escape gave a similar account port of San Jose de Guatemala by solcharacter. a viva voce the By majority great problem which confronts the of the New York the mountains is very expensive. No of the accident. He said no one in the diers, has won its claim against the was elected commander was finally BQd in 1879 elected senior report overwhelmingly people of Utah. In the Sagiuaw valley doubt as men become more experienced rear cars was injured. The attendants United States and will be paid 5800,000 department vice commander-in-chief- , all of which adopted. of Michigan, where I have lived for new methods by reservoirs and perhaps of the express and baggage cars had re- lnaemnincation. important positions he tilled with credit twenty years, there are thousands of by artesiau wells will be a ,pted. An tired to the rear coaches to catch a litDead. He is said to be a forcible speaker and a acres of the richest land in that state It does not seem to me that more than The Davis Will Case. tle sleep and the entire fatality theremodel presiding oflicer. Morristown, N. J., August 6. which are absolutely valueless on ac one acre in ten of the really good land is fore was confined to the occupants of 6. The testiMont, Butte, August B. Samuel afof of the Axtell died "The platform this count of being under water most of the as yet irrigated and made productive. It principles the smoking car and locomotive. mony of Witness Stacker was continued G. A. R is so broad that all honorably dis- ternoon at the residence of bis year. Small portions of these immense is marvellous how much garden truck Joseph M. Keeshan of St Louis and in the Davis case, detailing the pecul M. Charles Phillips, after a brief swales bave been reclaimed and made one man raise on fivo acres of these recharged soldiers and sailors can stand Antonio Imbello, an Indian, died at the iarities of the handwriting of James upon it In the opinion of your com- illness." Mr. Axtell came on a visit from valuable by being dyked, the water each claimed lands. They have at Logan, in These deaths hospital in this city. the Eddy, supposed forger. Attorney mittee, tbe fact that the department of Santa Fe, New Mexico, four years ago to spring being taken out with pumps run the Cache valley, an agricultural colmake the number or latauties twelve. uuques, oi juumwa, lowa, was exam Louisiana and Mississippi consists of regain his impaired health. He waB born by steam engines. In the Saginaw lege and experimental farm under govOf the injuried some others will prob- ired, testifying as to the signature of part of which are composed of in Franklin county, Ohio, Oct 4, 1819; valley the problem is to get the water off ernment charge. It is managed by a ably die. James Davis, one of the alleged wit posts white comrades and others of colored and was educated at Oberlin and the the land. In Utah the problem is to get very competent gentleman, of large exNew York, Aug. 7. The West Shore nesses of the alleged will, which he main. comrades is no sufficient reason for Western Reserve colleges. In 1851 he water upon the land. To effect the de who was born in New Hampofficial says: "From what can be learned tained was not his, and gave the reasons making this radical change in our rules went to California and was prosecuting sired result large ditches and races are perience, shire and so is familiar with mountains. there is no doubt the accident this wny ne tnougnt so. for Amador charand regulations. Our fraternity, attorney county in 1854. He started way up in the mountains, high His work must prove of value to Utah. morning was the result of the neglect of ity and loy.O.ty, should be witnessed by was sent to congress from the first con- above the valley; and the water runs the conductor of the freight train to At the World's Fair. our deeds as well as our words. The gressional district of Colifornia in 1867. along the Bides of the mountains in A Runaway. send back a flagman and warn trains two years later. In 1874 these large ditches or races for miles, Boston, August 6 At the annual recommendation of the commander in and in the third precinat over moving on the same track. Yesterday, He was appointed by President Grant the sifle gorges being crossed in plauk The following is a revised list of the meeting of the national bar association chief is based upon the fact that seven the river, there was quite a serious runof Utah of governor of 3 the and tillable then When of lands' the of colored flumes. the are th committee on l,he today, report territory, department posts V. Jones and his wife were oi killed and injured: international law was adopted, providing Louisiana and Mississippi had petitioned transferred by President Hayes to New reached the water is often many feet away. their way to town riding on a lumber KILLED. Mexico. oe he was Comrades the of taKen tor tee organization for a separate department. mountains. It mat steps Subsequently ap- above on the side which the box had been re- Carrillo Alfonz, Coco Roca, Vincenzo or an international bar association to representing part of their post appeared pointed chief justice of the supreme is then taken in lateral ditches down wagon from and dump boards substituted, DiLauri. Dominico, Richone, Thomas meet at the World s Columbian exposi before a committee and claimed in ar court of New Mexico, from whish posi- into the villages and cities below and to moved when their team became frightened and Merlino, John Rosia, Dominico Stanils, tion at umcago in iy& that it was tbeir unde- tion he resigned in May, 1885. Since the farms. gument Both Mr. and Mrs. Jones run one Antonio Scozzafave, John Giambot, The moment one enters a city the first were away. and that of many others, that time he has been engaged in the rstanding bruised and cut, and very badly unknown. All the above Italians are all And Why So? noticeable feature that he sees is the Mr. Jones had one foot bo badly mashed that colored comrades were only practice of law in Santa Fe. adults. Fireman Michael Burgen, of water clear be creof stream a for clean, running that it will some weeks for it to recover. department t? Chicago, August 6. The executive petitioning The Boodlers. Macedon, New York, was instantly committee along the side of all the streets from Drs. Powers and Gordon dressed the of the World's Columbian ated in the state of Louisiana the same killed. Antonio Umliello died after rethe for wounds and bruises which were very water which the inhabitants dip have adopted resolutions re as ia other states, in which department Ottawa, August Iii the investiga all moval to the house of the Good Shep- Expositionthe railroads and household their be drinking ah should pur and white to black, comrades, make half rates painful and the victims of the accident tion before the committee on privileges herd. Joseph M. Keesham, of St. Louis, questing in both directions on exhibits for the equally entitled to membership; and furposes; and tney airecs u Dy sman will be on deck again soon. and Thomas Hon. elections today, Good of died at the house the Shepherd. fair. The ronds had into their gardens, orchards and that of the money given ditches previously decided ther that they and those represented by awns. It passes on through the villages to charge rates going and to return them are opposed to the creation of a him for testiged WcBED. Indecent Exposure. he had political purposes paid separate department In view of the out $25,000 forthepurchaseof Le Monde out to the farms, which are cut up into Patrick Ryan, engineer of the express, goods free of charge. Charles Smith and Grant Maxey were made facta submitted to your committee it is the newspaper of Montreal, and Sir Hec plats by ditches large and small, Jives in Buffalo; Louis Diller, of tor before of would be Bishop yesterday on the purposes. the that irrigating it inexpeof Judge K. opinion Died. s tor A. Hungaria, Lovyas, organ. This was in 1884. One thing which strikes a stranger as charge of indecent exposure of their to place the authority with the He Langevin amount at the request of the paid John Chultz, a member of the "Uncle Milwaukee, August 6,Tnliii Rich. dient most farmers commander-in-chie- f to organize a new or Vanasz & Lassard. of Easton, ard, director of the Before the senate most novel is the fact that Isaac" farce oompany They were caught bathing ia German, Stadt in villages and very few of them are persons. weet ia of town and near the railway committee, Mr. Darwick, repre- live the Pennsvlvaina, Gerge H. Saxby, of theatre in this city and formerly con- provisional department in the states river will tell that on farms. their you They which there are organized departments." senting the Ontario bank, stated he over the Weber, and the author Hamilton, Ont, John Preston, of Troy, nected with the theaters in Berlin and This bridge to was first Warthis protect adopted plan could prove that 8175,000 had been cor report is signed by William consider this too public a N. Y., a raihoad man, Julius Myers, of St. Petersburg died today of themselves against the Indiaus and also ities, itforseems, apoplexy ner, John P. Rea, Lucius Fairchild, nude expended by the Mercier govern- so as to utilr ice ruptly bathing. Hence the arBuffalo, N. Y., B. E. Pitts, musical direc- at, vii i umv. pi water. of It rest Both were i the supply The minority report ment and its friends, and of this amount Henry Paintot. found guilty and fined tor of the "Uncle Isaac" company. with so convenicut was presented by W. S, Decker, of Co- $75,000 passed through the hands of Mr. was soon found to be which tbey promptly and $1.00 Camillo Libix, Gumino, Henry Tralono, A Remarkable Body. costs, reference to schools and churches, and lorado, tie concurred in the recommen- Pacaud. Guisepp Masciarello, Giovanni Rossi, 5. The People's dations of the commander-in-chie- f so much more sociable than ordinary paid. and August Machine' Toniasse ToDzano, Nicolo, farm life, that it has become the settled party convention, which closed this recoYiimenf ed that the rules and regulaThe Prize Fjffht at the Park. Proctor Knott Dead. Lugui Donario, all Italians, an unknown evening, was a remarkable gathering. tions be so changed as to authorize the plan of the territory. In the Cache valan Cabello, Antonio Park and N. Y., August 6. Proctor City, August 6. Special Hungarian miles and Saratoga, was composed of the dissatisfied ele- commander-in-chie- f is over dewhich It a long forty to organize well known race horse, died ley, Italian. d the Tbe Knott Commercial. of all parties. Every delegate had nas an ments wnion right and ten miles existwide, in the departments now The above were all taken to the house his own idea how existing troubles could partment in his stall at Horsehaven today. His nearly abundance of water, there are twenty of between Whalen and Sullivan was a. satisfied whenever reping upon proper K. R. Serviss, be remedied and was of the Good Shephajd. name and fame are known to turfmen these villages, containing from 500 to disposed to insist resentations that they may be organized draw. Jim Donnelson was referee and of Newark, N. Y., Lewis Taylor of West it The total repre- without detriment to the G. A. R. or any all over the country. For while his 5.300 people each. I doubt it there are being upon adopted. form during the past couple of years twenty people who live on the Tarms Ed Kelly and Capt. Murphy time keepPoint, N. Y., and irrank J. setter or mis sentation was 1,253 delegates, about 400 department organization. has not been the highest as a city were removed to their homes. of whom were present. The platform For senior vice commander-in-chie- f they cultivate among the 40,000 people ers. From the start to the finish it was went through with a rush, but after the there was but one candidate, Henry M. old be won laurels enough to place him in that valley, except those who have a spar and clinch, and not a half dozen the most famous race horses of farms contigious to the villages. The blows were struck amounting to anyIt Was Not Revised. delegates read it carefully in the Duflield, of Michigan, being chosen by among He captured both the farms are small, containing from five to the country. Ne6. in The knots letter of they acclamation. T. S. Clarksou, papers, gathered St. Petersburg, August thing, though Sullivan bled freely. town and discussed it braska, Peter B. Avers, of Dele ware, an d Junior Champion and Futurity, in the one hundred acres each. I do not think There were neck twisters in the clinchee. which recently appeared in the Berlin-rsk- e about Salvator after a great they average over forty acres to the and Tidende. of Copenhagen, in which freely. Many have already declared Albert Sholes, of Georgia, were nom- latter defeating many cries of foul. The referee-kep- t hnish. lie cost his owne ?42o as farm in the whole valley; and the same Prince George of Greece gave a detailed their intention to bolt on account of the inated for junior vice commander-in-chiealong with his business and finding won for him more than is true of the entire territory. the men either could not or would not account of the attack made on the czar liquor plank, which they say they did Clarkson won on the first ballot. For yearling inand seasons three be raced. 1100,000 When the water supply is abundant tlsrht would not allow fouls and made owitch by a Japanese policeman, has not intend to adopt as a part of the plat- chaplain three candidates, S. B. Payne, the yield of crops per acre is something them go ten rounds. In the sixth An Indian Murdered. greatly altered the estimate which was form. The leaders are confident of form- of Florida) D. C. Milner, of Kansas, and marvellous. Roots or all kinds are pro- Whalen said "The sou of a b tried to at first formed here of Ithe prince's ac ing a coalition with prohibitionists not A. B. Kendrick, of Iowa, were nomAlbuquerque, N. M. Aug. 6. Word duced in abundance. They will tell you bite me." Long, on behalf of Sullivan, tion upon that occasion, and has been later than 1892 and are going into the inated, and Payne was elected. Surgeon was station that 300 bushels of potatoes per acre is claimed a foul that was not allowed. the means of placing him in terrible dis- national campaign very strong Their General Stevenson, of Connecticut, was near received from Wingate state Navajoe reservation, that yester- only a moderate crop, and that 400 or by acclamation. Past Commagrace in this city. The reason for this plan is to extend the plank demanding William Warner, chair- day afternoon several cowboys killed an 500 are very common. One man looked altered feeling entertained for the prince government ownership of railroads and nder-in-Chief Bofock Dead. Indian in a dispute over a horse. The "innoeent and lamb-like- " when declaris the fact that he caused to be published telegraph, or the liquor trnllic, and have man of the committee on address of the Indians are worked 800 commander-in-chief, considerably bushels were resoluup ing that as high as his own account of the attack upon the agents in charge who will conduct the Ltjjchburg, Va., Aug. G. Hon. Thomreported and the band are in hot sometimes grown and dug on one acre, as S. Bocock, for a number of years a czarewitch without previously submit- business much as poetofficesarenow run. tions, which were adopted, petitioning over theofkillingmurderer the and his com saw fields of wheat standing which member of congress and epeakur of the ting the manuscript for revision. It is The bolting element's strength cannot congress for legislation providing for the pursuit the parties meet t lthey assured me would yield sixty bush- confederate congress, died last night, considered here that the story told by be estimated' until tbe delegates report oustody and care of Mount McGregor pan ions. Should will encounter result. els to the acre. aged GG years. I'nnce George emphasizes certain ru to their constituents. cottage, and for amendments to the re- - deadly STHAn sr. X. Y Aue. 6. Thia mom icg a freight train on tbe West bhore rv.'rr.l ifiiinar west broke in two be tween Port Byron and Montezuma, and the fast tram following smashed into the rear rectkm. Ten Italians en route to Niagara Falls in the smoking car. were killed, and eleven others in the same car injured, some of bom will probably die. One sleeping car burned, ana it ie supposed nearly all the passengers were rescued. It is thought that none of them are badly hurt, The injured were brought here and are being cared for. The bodies of the killed are at Port Bvron, w here the coroner w ill hold an imem-U- r inquest Among the injuredwhowasdied on at an oners (omtianT. the way here, Tae train men Bay that miirA mere killed in the wreck. Physi cians were sent from Syracuse, Auburn, Montezuma and Port Byron. The rant at the wreck was terrible one. The followinff i the list of the dead: Michael Bergen, fireman of the passenger train; Alphonse, Carilla, Coco Roeoo; Merlins. John Rosio, Veanzo DilaurL Dominioo Ricbone, Dominioo Santilo, Antonio Scazzaffava, Italians; John Brambott and an unknown Italian who died on the way to Syracuse. Of the eleven Italians injured four will probably die. They were in the smoking car of the St Louis express, which crashed into the freight train. Twelve cars of the freight train were wrecked and piled up on the tracks, nnmn telv blocking the road. Hardly a whole piece of timber was left of the amokinff car. The wreck took fire and th naiancrer car burned with the ex ception of three sleeping cars. The train was made up of two express cars, baggage car and sraaking car, a day coach and four nleenincr cars. J. J. Sullivan, of this city, was on the train. He was in the car behind the smoker. Regarding the accident he said: "The freight train with which our train collided was running on passenger train time. When the crash came the scene was a terrible one. The smoking car was "mushed to splinters and the shrieks t?f the wounded imprscroed in tbe meeting of the encampment this morning the election of conjuiander-inchief was declared the riret business. There were four candidates: Jonn Ben-iami- f. ..j.ii. on,! m nd t son-in-la- 6-- Ateade-Korrain- e, . rt-i- SrslN-GFiEL- to-Th- ten-roun- two-yea- f. r- |