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Show SOUTHERN UTAH ST. UE01IUE, STAR. UTAH. PENNSYLVANIA BONDS. Five Million Dollars at a. Big in Bates. Raduc-tio- n Philadelphia, July 8. It was announced this afternoon that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company had placed with a Arm of bankers in London one million sterling consolidated 8 Vs per cent bonds maturing in 1845. It is understood the money is to be used to take up certain mortgages falling due In January next, among them being 11,000.000 West Jersey first sixes and several small loans on branches near Pittsburg. An officer of the company explained that the object In making the loan at this time was to reap the advantage of the abnormal ease of the money market. The company," he said, has driven a pretty good business bargain, in that It Is to secure a renewal of Its loans at a reduction of 2 to 2V4 per cent In interest. A portion of the new mon" ey will probably be expended In better-nients.- Town Under Water. Sallna. Kan., July 8. A hailstorm, accompanied by much heavy wind, swept over the southwest portion of this county, doing a great amount of damage. At Bridgeport the Smoky Hill river la out of Its banks, and the entire town Is under water. Great apprehension Is felt for fear this city will be inundated. as the river Is nearly out of Its banks and Is steadily rising. Many farms are entirely submerged southeast of this city. Some Big Hail Stones. Guthrie, Okla., July 8. A terrtflo hall and wind storm prevailed here last night. The hail fell as large as hen's eggs, doing a large amount of damage to crops and breaking hundreds of windows. In one township there was a waterspout. Bridges were washed away. TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION. Why a Womans Bights Hethodlst Withdrew from the Church. New York, July 8. Dr. Alice B. Campbell has started a movement that may work a revolution In church government. She has made a stand for woman's suffrage In the church. Dr. Campbell was a member of the Central M. E. Church in Brooklyn, and has always been a believer in womans rights. She was the first woman admitted to practice medicine in Brooklyn, also the first to become a member of the Kings County Medical Society. She has been a member of the Central Church twenty-seve- n years. A short time ago she sent a letter to the Rev. W. D. Thompson, pastor of the church, asking him to scratch her name from the membership roll and write beneath It: Membership withdrawn because unwilling to remain longer In an .organisation that sanctions taxation without representation." The minister replied that he had withdrawn her name, but had pasted her reasons on the records in her own handwriting, as he preferred that no examining thp records In the fu-fc- -a mcht thi,!ik iVosoamowil-Iiiy- -. CHICAGO DESPERADO. Bun Down and Killed, After Wounding Three Citizens. Chics eo, July 8. In Western desperado style, a man, suppposed to be C. F. Cole, assaulted and attempted to rob D. C. McGloln in his saloon at 84 Adams street. In the heart of the business district of Chicago this evening. After seriously wounding McGloln the thief escaped, and made the most remarkable race for liberty ever seen In the streets of Chicago. After firing Into the mob that pursued him and seriously wounding three citizens, he was run down and killed by Officer Rosenthal, opposite the entrance of the Auditorium Hotel on Congress street. , The wounded are: D. C. McGloln, saloon keeper, three wounds In the head, will recover. H. M. Sternberger, shot in the abdomen. Taken to SL Luke's hospital, will probably die. Samuel Stone, shot In the right leg, will recover. McGloln was alone In his saloon, when Cole entered and asked the saloon keeper to get him some meat tllat he claimed to have left In the Ice box of the saloon. McGloln walked to the entrance of the lee box and Cole drawIning a revolver, ordered him to go side and stay there McGloln pruned and struck the robber In the face, nearly knocking him down. The two men then clinched and to fought desperately. Cole managed get one arm free, and with his revolver he pounded the saloon keeper viciously. Inflicting three wounds on the head. The robber then broke loose from McGloln and ran down the street, McGloln following. He boarded a State street car McGloln was till close upon mm, and Cole seeing that he could not shake off his pursuer ran through the car. Several citizens had by this time Joined In the chase, and, after running one block to Jackson street, Cole fired a shot Into the crowd, which failed to hit any one. The flight and pursuit then turned toward Wabash avenue and south upon that street. Rosenthal and T. Dayo joined In the chase, and as Cole was badly winded by this time they rapidly came up with him. Half and way between Van Buren street was close Congress street, Rosenthal him to surupon his man and ordered render. Cole replied with a shot, and the bullet tore Into the stomach of Sternberg, who was among the leaders of the pursuit. Just before reaching the corner of Congress street, the officer fired at the fugitive, who returned the compliment. The bullet of the officer wnt wild, but that of Cole brought down Stone, another pursuer, with a ball through the leg. Rosenthal fired a second time, and this time Cole staggered. He continued to run, however, turned the corner and ran east on Congress street until he was directly In front of the entrance to the great Auditorium theater, where he fell. He died within two minutes without Baying a word. The officer's bullet had passed through the left kidney and Into the lung. Nothing Is known of the man In Chicago. The only manner In which his name could be determined was by the laundry mark on his clothing, which read N. E. Cole. He was of slender build, about 5 feet 8 Inches tall, and had a dark mustache. Crops and Buildings Destroyed. Ardmore, I. T., July terrific "electrical rain and wind storm swept over this .section about 9 oclock last night, doing great damage. In certain localities tme force of the wind equaled a tornado. The main force of the storm seems to have spent itself about fifteen miles southeast, and near Marietta. I. T., where a number of houses were blown down. One Hudson was killed by lightning at Bob station, twenty miles south of here. Cornfields, buildings and fences were laid low. ' Citllerei. dispatch from Chamberlain, S. D., says: The probabilities are that a general movement all along the line Is to be made against the cattlemen and others In this State, who have for years openly defied the law by fencing Government lands. United States Commissioner Morrow of this city has received instructions to Investigate several cases where stockmen have placed fences around large The Supply of Cattle. bodies of Government land. United It will tako five years at least to work States Commissioners at other points throughout the State have undoubted- the cattle supply up to whnre there will ly received similar orders, and the be overproduction. In the meantime practice of Illegally fencing portions of the public domain will be stopped, if values will be high and when the suppossible. ply exceeds the demand, with resultant lower values, the cattlAian who always CHALLENGE FOB WANNER. succeeds, will have sold out to barely a Proposes a Discussion of the Honey remnant. This history of production Question. of all the commodltiei is oae and the Washington, July 9. A. J. Warner, same. When either from overproducpresident of the American Bimetallic tion or undeproductlon, the amount League, has written a letter to Hon. Charles S. Fairchild, chairman of the produced was more than the commercommittee on sound currency of the cial or natural demaad, values liavo Reform Club of New York, In which he Invites the committee on sound cur- gone down and the Increased accumurency to a discussion of the money lations have bean sacrificed In order question on distinctive propositions to that other brahehes of Industry could be agreed upon and to be carried on by be pursued, but as a rule where this questions and answers. I would suggest, he says, that changing policy has been followed little not more than five or less than three money has beau made. To tho man on a side be selected to conduct the dis- who diversifies his minor productions cussion to be held at such time and and makos a specialty of some oue of places as may be agreed upon." the many branches of Industrial labor, A MOTHER'S DEVOTION. will the most good result. Texas Live Movement Against Chicago, July 8. A Will Go to Jail Bather Thau Beveal Her Daughters Whereabouts. Chicago, July 8. Mrs. Lizzie Cottier of Y'nshlngton was to-dsentenced to six mouths In Jail for contempt of court In re using .to disclose the whereabouts of her daughter, Florence. Mrs. Cottier Is the Washington stenographer who, in 1888, after placing her daughter In hiding, told the Buffalo police that the child had been drowned. Her husband, Alonzo Cottier, a wealthy Chicagoan, had attempted, during the hearing of the divorce case, to regain possession of the child, and Mrs. Cottier was ordered by the Court to tell where her daughter is hidden. This she refused to do. Mrs. Cottier dramatically declared that she could not, no matter what the penalty, disclose her daughter's whereabouts. as she believed that the girl would be injured should her father find Stock ay her. Late this afternoon Judge Payne granted an appeal In the case, and Mrs. Cottier was released on bail pending a , decision. Colorados New Gold Field. Florence, Colo., July 8. There Is considerable excitement here over the discovery of a new gold field in the Greenhorn range, nine miles south of this place, directly on the line of survey of the Florence Southern Railway. One vein of ore which Is free milling Is forty feet wide, and has had a mill test running about $10 for the full width of the vein. Another tunnel in thirty feet struck a vein of quarts that seems to be high grade ore, and prospectors claim an assay of $55 for the whole vein, some parts of It running as high as $500. A Journal Cattle Scarce On The Range. report from South Dakota says: Parties representing Omaha, Sioux City and Chicago packers and livestock dealers are making Inquiries ss to tho number of fat cattle on ranges along the Missouri river aiid oa the Sioux reservation. The drouth last season spoiled much pasture and generally lessened the supply of beefcattloA As a consequence early spring shipment fell far below what was anticipated. Ranchmen are marketlug the better grades, but tho supply Is limited a compiled with former years, snd ualess pasliuage is unusually good the demaud Vlll greatly exceed the supply. This meins an advance In the price of besf entile until ntil the September at least: possibly holidays. From six to a dozen ear loads ef cattle pass hors from wsstaru muches dally, while stthis time In formes years they wsnt in heavy train loads. (Along the foot hills and In tho Cheyenne river country ranchmen report stoek Id I averless age condition, but the somber than for ssvarsl years previous, pearly all of the young stock from northern aid wasters ranches was marketable last fall and but remained tof the I spring shipment. Grcon Oulops for the market It Is not anything and everything In this Hue that sella Ail people do not use ouloos, sad those that do are particular. Very siaall green onions do not sell neither do vary large, coarse, strong onions. It la only medium size, yonng snd tender onions that are wanted. The onlou part should be clean and white, with the firsoaier coating carefully removed. The tops should remain on unless trimmed a few inches from the top, so as to have them look nice, anything to give them a good appearance. They shohltfbe carefully tied In buneh-e- s of four or five onions in a bunch. Boxes of oue bushel same size as berry 'case is about the best package to use, for when In large packages they may become heated. This package Is also easy to handle. 24-qu- Some Poultry Suggestions. A , wes:ern poultry raiser makes tbs following observations: The luside arrangements of a henhouse should be made movable, so that cleaning out or whitewashing, the nests and ropsts may be easily carried L outside. A chtftTTuflfom is far better to use in whltewashln than a whitewash brush. We keep llmo where our fowls can have free access to It, and almost any time Id the day there may be seen one or two or more fowls picking over the In lime pile. Charcoal Is another essential; the fows need It; sharp grli they must havs or they will not remain healthy very long. Many a chick dies with cholera, simply for the want of grit, or gravel. I am often asked which Is best to set hens, on or above the ground. I think there Is little difference where she Is placed; If she has good fresh eggs and Is not molosted she will probably make a good hatch. A sotting bon ought to have a Best large enough to turn round In, but not so large sho can not gather the eggs up undor her and keop them snug and warm: If a nest Is so flat that the eggs keep rollleout from under the hen every time she uuvos, they will get chiliad, ode at a time, aud the consequence Is a poor hatch. Seitlng hens should be dusted heavily with Insec powder two ot three times during ths three or four weeks It takes her to bring off a brood of chickens, for lies cause a great uneasiness to setting hens. . Tomatoes for the inarek wDo not pick them flfio ripe nor too green. All should be about the same for ripeness, or souio will rot before the others will ripen. Welcoming from long dis taucos thiif'ought tofbo Qpcked jvhon they beg It o color, and when nearer, to mrfrkei th should be rlpa Pack In four basket crates, aud pack them as light as possible, so that they will not shako and become bruised. Ship them of good oven size, which will assist the selling materially. 1 1 . LINCOLN GROWS AS A HEBO. He would be a rash man who should say he understood Abraham Lincoln. No doubt natures deep as his, and various almost to the point of can be sounded only by the Judgment of men of a like sort If any such there be. But some things we all may see and Judge concerning him. You have In him tho type and flower of our growth. It Is as If Nature had made a typical Amerioan, and then had added with liberal hand ths royal quality of genius to show ss what the type could be. Lincoln owed nothing to his birth, everything to his growth; had no training save what he gave himself; no nurture, but only a wild and native strength. His life was his schooling, and every day of it gave to his character a new touch of development. His manhood not only, but his perception also, expanded with his life. Hie eyes, as they looked more and more abroad, beheld the National life, and comprehended It; when grown to manhood, the one leader In all the Nation who held the whole people singly In his heart-h-eld even the Southern people there, and would have won them back. And so we have in him what we must call the perfect development of native strength, tho rounding out and nationAndrew alization of the provincial. Jackson was a type, not of the Nation, but of the West. For all the tenderness there was In the stormy heart of the r&aslerful man, and staunch and simply loyalty to all who loved him, he learned nothing In the East; kept always the flavor of the rough school In which he had been bred; was never more than a frontier soldier and gentleman. Lincoln differed from Jackson by all the length of his unmatched capacity to learn. Jaekson could understand only men of his own kind; Lincoln could understand men of all sorts and from every region of the land; seemed himself. Indeed, to be all men by turns, as mood succeeded mood In his strange nature. He never ceased to stand. In bis bony angles, the express Image of the ungainly frontiersman. Ills mind never lost the vein ot coarseness that had marked him grossly when a youth. And yet how he grew and strengthened In the real stuff and dignity and greatness; how nobly he could bear himself without the aid of grace! He kept always the shrewd and seeing eye of the woodsman and the hunter, and the flavor of wild life never left him; and yet how easily his view widened to great affairs; how surely he ef whatever perceived the significancehim touched him and made neighbor the knew to Itself. Lincoln people and man or did no as other could; their life and now stands In his place singular In all the annals of mankind, the "brave, sagacious, foreseeing, patient man" of the people, "new birth of our Profesnew soil, the first American. sor Woodrow Wilson. In the July Li Hung Chang and General Grant. The good grace with which the Viceroy of China, LI Hung Chang, consented to go to Japan and make the best terms possible for bis unfortunate country, is In evidence as to the wisdom attributed to him by General Grant Mr. John Russell Young tells. In the Review of Reviews, bow. In 1879, when he was returning from Asia In the company of General Grant the General spoke of the men whom he had known in his journey around the world, especially the sovereigns and statesmen of European and Asiatic nations. "I have met on this Journey," he said, four great men Bismarck, Beacons-flelGambetta and Li Hung Chang. I am not sure, all things considered, but that Li Is the greatest of the four." It remains to be seen to what extent the Viceroy will Justify the estimate of General Grant Bo far he has surely grown in greatness. In his sketch of LI Hung Changs life, Mr. Young, whose official position in China enabled him to know the Viceroy Intimately, relates many interesting, things concerning him. Returning to the Viceroys admiration for General Grant Mr. Young writes: The relations between General Grant and Li had almost the element of romance. From the moment that General Grant arrived In China the Viceroy took the deepest Interest in his movements. Meinges from him awaited us at every point Arriving at Tientsin on an American before we could debark the Viceroy came on board. I remember the meettbe long, searching curious ing, glaaces bestowed upon General Grant the courtesy, the deference, and the respect. The fact that General Grant had held sovereign power sank deeply into the Viceroys mind, and sovereignty could not be divested by any mere resignation or supersession by electoral forma Then came the element of imagination to be expected from a poet like LI, whose mind was permeated with hyperbole and Oriental fanclea He and General Grant were born in the same year. The name of General Grants opponent was Lea His owe name was LI. Their stars were in accord. I recall the fervor with which the Viceroy evolved this graceful fancy, as though It were a message from the stare. His cynicism and haughtiness vanished. The fates had ordained their meetlpg for some high purpose. The Viceroy not alone attended the different entertainments given by the Consuls and other officials In Tientsin, but arranged splendid feasts of his own. And during tbe entertainments he must needs have the whole party photographed, as well as a special photograph of himself and the General I remember the interest with which hs arranged the details for the picture. The table must be so. The must be in such a fashion. And while the left hand was the place of honor In China, General Grant must appear on the right, as that was the place of honor in the United States. I was told by one of the Viceregal household that when General Grant left, the Viceroy moped about for a day or two and would do no work. d, war-vesse- l, tea-cu- ps A NEW RACE. Hr. Petries Recent Remarkable Dis- coveries In Egypt. A navf tace has been found, which had not any object or manufacture like s, the Egyptians; their pottery, their their beads, their mode of burial are all unlike any other In Egypt; and not a single usual Egyptian scarab, or hieroglyph, or carving, or amulet, or head, or vase has been found In the whole of the remains in question. That we are dealing with something entirely different from any age of Egyptian civilisation yet known is tnereiore certain. That this was not merely local variety Is also certain, as the strange remains are found over more than a hundred miles of country, from Abydos to our own work was near the middle of this district, between Balias and Negada. In this arfea. and indeed side by side with these strange remains, are Egyptian towns and tombs with pottery, beads and scarabs of the fourth, twelfth, eighteenth and nlneteeth dynasties. exactly like those found similarly dated In northern Egypt. The strata of Egyptian civilisation were therefore uniform over the whole country, so far as we are concerned. No local difference can account for the novelties. The age of the new race Is fixed by the juxtaposition of their burials with those of the fourth and twelfth dynasties, and of their towns and burials of the twelfth and eighteenth dynasties. These evidences prove that they belong to the age between the fourth and twelfth dynasties; and ths known history further limits the data to between the seventh and ninth dynasties, or about 8000 B. C. The race was very tall and powerful, with strong features a hooked nose, long, pointed beard, and brown, wavy hair are shown by their carvings and bodily remains. There was no trace of the negro type apparent, and In general they seem closely akin to the allied races of the Libyans and Amorltes. Their burials are always with the body contracted, and not mummified, lying with head to south and face to west, Just the inverse of the contracted bodies at Medum. Although most of the graves have been disturbed, yet sufficient examples remain untouched among the 2000 graves opened by us to show that the bodies were generally mutilated before burial. One large and Important tomb showed four skulls placed between stone vases on the floor, a separate heap of loose bones of several bodies together, and around the sides human bones broken open at the ends and scooped out. Such treatment certainly points to ceremonial anthro- pophagy. Other graves are found with all the bones separated and sorted In classes. The type of the graves Is like that of those in the circle at Mycenae-op- en, square pits, roofed over with beams of wood. They are always by preference In shoals of water courses, showing that the race came from a rocky country, where excavation could not be done except In alluvium. The great development of the legs points to their having come from hills, and not from a eoaat or valley. The freshows quency of forked hunting-lance- s their habit of chasing tbe gazelle. Metal and flint are both In use by these people. Copper adzes show that the wood was wrought, and finely carved bulls legs to a couch Illustrate ths work. Copper harpoons were Imitated from the form In bone. Capper needles Indicate the use of sewn garments, and the multitudes of spindle wheels In ths town proves how common weaving must have been. Flint stat-uette- Gs-bele- n: was magnificently worked, far more elaborately than by the Egyptians of any age; the splendid examples in the Muauema Ashmolean and at Oxford, are not seen to belong to these people. Both knives and forked lances are found. Stone vases, of all material from alabaster to granite, were favorite possessions; they are beautifully wrought, but entirely made by hand, without any turning or lathe work. A very puzzling class of objects long known in Egypt are the slate figures of birds and animals, rhomb!, squares, etc. These now provq to be the toilet palettes for grinding malachite, probably for painting the eye, as among Egyptians of the fourth dynasty. Beads were favorite ornaments, and were made of cornelian, lazuli, transparent serpqntlne and glazed, Pltt-Rive- ra stone. Pottery was the favorite art of these new people; the variety, the fineness, and the quantity of it la surprising. Few graves are without ten or a dosen vases, sometimes even ss many as eighty. Most of these are of the coarser kinds, merely used for containing tbe ashes of the great funeral fire; for though the bodies were never burned, a great burning was made at each funeral, the ashes of which was carefully gathered and preserved, sometimes aa many as twenty or thirty large Jars full. (See the probably Amorite custom In IL Chron. xvL, 14, xxl., 19; Jer. xxlv., 5.) The varieties of pottery are the polished red hematite facing, the red with black tope (due to deoxidation In the ashes), and the light brown with wavy handles, like the Amorite pottery. A later stage of pottery was of coarser brown and of much altered forms, copying somewhat from Egyptian types of tbe Old Kingdom. The jam went through a series of changes, forming a continuous scale by which their relative ages can be seen. Animal-shape- d vases snd many curious sports are found In the redfaced pottery. Besldee these forms, three kinds of pottery seem to have been imported: Buff vases Imitating stone, with red spirals and figures of animals and men; red polished vases with figures of animals and patterns In white; and black bowls with Incised patterns, most like the earliest Italic pottery. Besides these designs, a greet variety of marks are scratched on the local pottery; but not a single hieroglyph, or sign derived from Egyptian writing, has bees found. Another fact showing the Isolation of these people from the Egyptians Is that all of the wheel fine pottery is was unknown. race new of source this cannot The be discussed until the hundreds ot skulls and skeletons which we have obtained are brought over and studied. Though some object point strongly to an Amorite connection others indicate a western source; and It must be remembered that fobably the Amorltes were a branch of the far Libyan race. The geographical xsltlon Is all In favor of the race hat Ing come Into Egypt through tbe Wests "n and great oases; for the seventh aal eighth Egyptian dynasties were still .Mng at Memphis, showing that no people had thrust themselves up the Nile valley. W. M. Flinders Fetrie, in the London wavy-hand- le hand-mad- e; THE FAT MANS INDIGNATION. He Voted Twice for Harrison, Was Exasperated. but He Govemor Morton Invited General Harrison to visit him at EUerslle recently, but; General Harrison refused. The Sun tells the rest of the story: "It Is too hot," he said, to travel. I prefer to remain quietly In town. I find that vsgwemepts wilL keep me in town, ancf I shall not see Governor Morton aaln on this trip. This seoond declination on the part of General Harrison to go to Ellerslle has started tongues wagging again. Some say that McKinleys is not the only boom that Is going to burst this spring, but that Harrisons, which, seemed In such fine shape less than a week ago, has many weak spots in It. The gossips say that Mr. Harrisons refusal of the second invitation after he had accepted It Is a regular backdown, and that he Is afraid to meet the Governor. However that may be. and whatever may be the motive of the refusal. It Is certain that the is not going to visit Governor Morton this spring, but he Intimated be that might do It the next time he came East. The hot weather had no seeming effect on the General. He was as chipper as ever, and though he wore the usual black frock coat and silk hat, he seemed twenty per cent cooler and more comfortable than tbe rest of the suffering humanity. He walked along the street as briskly as if the thermometer stood at freezing instead of at a hundred or so. He came Into the hotel about 5 oclock, when the air was nearly suffocating. There was a big, stout man standing at the door as be enface and tered, mopping his lobster-lik- e fanning himself with his hat. A morn uncomfortable-lookin- g individual could not be Imagined. As the General Wtent past him with his quick, springy walk, looking aa If he had just stepped out of a band-bothe man turned around and looked at him, .and then said: Ive been a Republican all my life, and have voted for Harrison twice, and shall vote again if I get a chance, but Im damned If he Isnt the Iceberg people have called him. I wouldnt believe it before, but just look at him and then look at me and my collar, and the big man wandered toward the bar. -- x, At an Evening Party. Once upon a time, says the New York Evening Sun, the Clever Girl and Young Apropos found themselves at a very stupid evening party. After several minutes of boredom the Clever Girl grew desperate. I tell you what lets, do. she said; you take one side of the room and Ill take the other, and well each see how many persons we can engage in conversation upon a certain topic without In any way annearina to i&raa jn the .7?.. All right," said Young Apropos; but what shall the topic be?" Cockroaches," said the Clever GlrL Straightway they separated, and, she going on one side of the room and he on the other, they talked to as many persons as possible upon cockroaches. g Just before time met. and both agreed that never they had more had a they evening. As the Clever Girl delightful was driving home with her mother the latter remarked: Oh,- by the way, do you happen to know If we areClara, troubled with ah vermin or ah cockroaches or anything of that sort?" No. mamma; why do you ask?" Innocently Inquired the Clever GlrL "Oh, nothing, returned the mother; only 4t was very strange so many people came to me this evening with recipes for getting rid of ah cockroaches. and I couldnt understand why It was." .u. leave-takin- - |