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Show r ANDREW JENSEN, Man Charged RESULT OF DESPERATE rablUhsr. SPANISH FORK, UTAH. per. Reel? & Allen compnny, recent- ly Incorporated, will construct a canal pine miles long from the Gray Bull river, near Otto, in Big Horn county, Wyoming. The big tie boom whleh burst a few days ago at tho Junction of the Encampment and riatte rivers, let down 00,000 'ties, and created Quite a panic at Fort Steele. Wyo. Four men were killed and four Injured by the collapse of a brldjg at Otto, Wyo. Throe gravel cars went down, the men being crushed to death In the ravine below. . 4s The government sheep inspector, now on duty in Carbon county, Wyo, has recently inspected and compelled the dipping of 30,000 sheep under United States government regulations. Three masked men held up and robbed six men in a saloon in Butte, socurlng about $20 and three watches. A mask fell from the leader of the gang and be was captured afterward. on foot at There is a movement Rawlins to establish club rooms there for the young men of that city. Several prominent business and railroad men are interesting themselves In the enterprise. Tho shearing plant of C. T. Thomas, near Park City, Mont., was Bwcpt away and totally destroyed, as the result of a cloudburst last week, 300 head of sheep and 350 head of cattle being drowned. At a mining camp near Rockdale, Wyo., James Watts shot and killed James Mullaney. It Is claimed the men quarreled and Mullaney attacked Watts with an ax, the latter shooting in self defense. A large amount of oil machinery, consisting of drills, engines and derricks, has been shipped from Cincinnati for the Cody Oil & Development company, which is operating on fields near Cody, Wyo, According to a dispatch from Tan- gier, El Mutnctsh, tho Moorish war minister, has IobI 6,000 men in a battle fought with the rebels at Amnicdinna. The Madrid Correspondence's at Tangier telegraphs that the Senhaya and Ergunba Kaby-lesurprised the sultan's army, inflict- s ing a loss of 6,000 men. The pretender to the ihrone, the Correspondence's representative adds, Is as yet Ignorant of tho victory of his supporters. A A News of Renewed Opposition of Protectionists In United States is Most Unwelcome to Cubans. Forces of the Sultan, Led by the MoorMeet With ish War Minister, In Losses Encounter Heavy With Rebels. Tho Bunee & Delfelter company has been organized to carry on the ihecp business in Fremont county, in Lander, with a capital of $75,000. The Natrona County Racing assorla-tiohas been formed at Casper, Wyo., for the purpose of building race tracks and establishing fair grounds at Cas- WILL FEAR THAT RECIPROCITY BE KILLED. IN MOROCCO. NORTHWEST NOTES. The BATTLE BOLT FROM THE SKY. News received In Havana of renewed opposition of tho protectionists In the United Slates to the confirmation of tho Cuban reciprocity treaty Is particularly unwelcome in Cuba at this uneture, os it had been hoped that the Cuban senate before the adjournment of the present session would ratify all the treaties pending with the Cuba is United States. Although bound, undor the Ilatt amendment, to rarry out all the other pending treaties, it Is feared that some senators may make the additional difficulties that the reciprocity treaty Is encountering at Washington an excuse the ratification of other treaties go over until the winter session of the Cuban congress. ng Causes the Death of Six Men and Serious Injury of a Score. Lightning struck a house stored with 3,000 pounds of dynamite at the new mines now being opened near Senecaville, Ohio, during a storm, and killed six men and injured a score of others, besides ruining the mine shaft and breaknlg nearly all the windows In Senecaville, a mining town of 300 people, half a mile from the mine. The men killed and wounded were carpenters. When the storm came up the men took refuge in John Saltzbur-ger- s barn, some distance from the mine, and suddenly & blinding flash came and In an Instant the barn was demolished and the men scattered within a radius of 100 feet, over a score bleeding from Injuries sustained from heavy rocks torn from the earth and from the timbers from the blacksmith shop. NEGRO JACK THE RIPPER. Colored Fiend With Mania for Killing Women Turns Up in St Louis. Two women, one white and the other colored, were assaulted and left for dead about three pnd a half miles east of East St. Louis Tuesday afternoon, and a posse is out looking for a negro described by one of his victims. If he should be captured it Is believed there will be a lynching, for the TOO mates Halifax, With Killing Two Helpin Nine Weeks. N. S.t special says: Dougall, who is cn trial in London for the moat house murders, came to Halifax several years ago as a quartermaster's sergeant. He was accompanied by a wife and two children, and two more children were born in Halifax. Mrs. Dougall became suddenly the next day. Three weeks afterward Dougall left for England, but returned five weeks later with another woman, whom he Introduced as his wife. She was young and good looking and It was said that she had considerable money. She seemed to be In excellent health, but in fourteen days she was a corpse. Soon afterward Dougall departed for ill, died and was burled good. Oregon Girl Drives Wild Beast Away With Buggy Whip. Miss Ida Grimes, a young woman living on the Washington side of the Columbia, three miles north of Woodland, Ore., on tho Kalama road, beat off a young cougar with her riding whip and made her escape Wednesday morning. Miss Grimes lives with her uncle, and every morning and evening rides on horseback to a hill ranch to assist She was making her rein milking. turn trip Wednesday morning when attacked by a she was ferociously young cougar, receiving several body DEEP FOR WORDS. Tho United Spates government has adopted an attitude similar to that of England toward the new Servian dynasty. It will be in no haste to recognize the new government in the absence of some exhibition of a disposiGrant Jones, editor and publisher of tion to punish the guilty, Therefore, the Doublejack at Dillon, Wyo., died Mr. Jarkson, who, besides being minat Battle, Wyo., on the 20th, from ister to Greece, is also minister to heart failure. lie was recognized as Servia, will not present bis credentials one of the ablest newspaper and mag- to the government of King Peter at preseut. In fact, these credentials azine writers in the west have not been prepared. Pat Donovan, a well known rancher and politician at Clinton, Mont, was Foreigners Like Our Boots and Shoes. hot fatally by three highwaymen. As Exports of boots and shoes in tho he lay dying upon the sod Donovan fiscal year about to end seem likely to exceed those of any preceding year, returned the fire, killing one hold-uboth In quantity and value. In mu and fatally wounding another. Ranchmen in the vicinity of Laramie the number of pairs of boots and shoes peak, Wyoming, report heavy losses exported was 370,074; In 1890 the of cattle from a disease resembling number had only Increased to 687,103 anthrax fever. Tho Rutherford broth- pairs; by 1900 the number had grown to 3.010,720 pntrs, and In 1902 the toers have already lost seventy-onhead tal was 3,960,766 pairs, and In the fisfrom this mysterious disease. cal year about to end, the total will Resident Engineer Graff, at White-fis- pass the 4,000,000 line. lake, Mont, was blown to pieces KISSES DON'T COUNT. by a blast which he forgot had not exploded. Graff disregarded the warn- Indiana Judge Decides Wife May Kiss Whom She Pleases. ing of his foreman and proceeded to examine the effects of the first blast, An Indianapolis dispatch says: V when ho was blown over 200 feet in at Kokomo yesterday a Judge, In dethe air by the charge of dynamite. ciding a unique case, held that a wife A hip bonejmeasurlng 16x10 inches may kiss whoover she plenses and as and supposedly belonging to some pre- often as she likes without violating historic monster, was recently un- her marriage vows. Kisses, tho Judgt earthed in the famous Fish creek fos- held, are a wife's personal property sil beds In the northwestern part of and may be distributed to her friends the county, says a Big Timber, Mont., regardless of race, color, sex or pro vlcus condition of servitude. special. PICTURE PUZZLE. dralnd whe Miss Itrennu a bottle of neld. As she til hl-b- t so Sehtulrh staited to run and fin' three shots at the eiow-i- that followet Fluully he stopneii uml shot himself. t 1 !: "1 . sm-- l tt r , flsre-- il N- tr fi-- . A n non-unio- n to-b- e "There she comes." RAN l.l , In , non-unio- at Scranton, Pa.. Sunduy, and w 111 die, and Ernest Schmich shot bimsi In the heart. They were lovers, but another woman to ho 11 Nought Rchmtch to an u Hegel engagement to her Friends hud not iced the susplc Bllil b- R miles south of Holbrook, In whir Henry Barrett was killed and l'rln Coloman was probably fatally woum ed. Both are prominent eattlcnvi and have lived In Apache county fi'or many years. Only meager reports irr obtainable, but It appears that . men became involved in dispute ot cr their respective grazing penults on the reservation. of (be enuple, ! 11 dsperate battle between cattlemen on tho Apache Indian reservation, to oils they came ' 1 HIDDEN Stockmen Fight Duel. News reached Holbrook, Arlz., of Decided to Die Together. Jennie Brennan drank carbolic at s Hay-IIerra- n "Little Russian comment" (news item), but a lot of thinking. excitement scratches. Her clothing was badly crime has caused great the farmers of torn. and indignation among the American bottoms, where it ocdefended Miss Grimes vigorously curred. herself with a riding whip, and finally One of the victims, Mrs. Annie pulled her horse away from the Green, a colored woman, aged 25, was hungry cub. The animal was about clubbed about the head, her skull the size of a hog and had evidently fractured and left arm broken. Just been weaned by tho mother cougar. before relapsing into unconsciousness she told of the assault and described A special meeting of the stockmen a light yellow negro, aged 25 years, as her assailant. She was evidently of Big Horn county, has been called to the first victim of the fiend, who later meet at Meeteetse, Wyo., for July 15, proceeded to the home of John Bruno, to take action on the forest reserve a wellto-dfarmer living between East St. Louis and BelkTUet, and questions and other matters pertaining to their interests. committed the second crime. h s fit, self-defens- e e Corbelt-Fitzslmmon- Grant is a casdidate forts ' presidency. The striking miners at Senator W. A. Clark, President of the Colo., are still out, and the e Road, Says Trains Will be Runstrike Is not In sight. ning Into Salt Lake From Coast In That Time. The new Washington state qulring barber shops to clrge At a banquet tendered by the Com- Sunday is to bo tested in the rot mercial dub of Salt Lake City to As the result of the collapse United States Senator W. A. Clark, bridge at Eau Claire, Wls., gx' " president of the San Pedro, Los Ange-eere seriously injured and & Salt Lake road, on Wednesday Injured. slightly night, the statement was made by the men were killed by an Five senator that trains would be running slon which complotey wrecked between Salt Lake City and the coast No. 3 of the Raton Coal & Coi within the next two years. pany at Blossburg, N. M, Among the 'other statements given It is reported from Aspa-i- tha out which are of interest to Utahns in bo persons were burned In a fire t will Lake Salt were that particular the general headquarters of the new streyed the greater part of the of Moench, Kireben, lower Austr I road; the principal shops of the road, Edward Hoerkle, aged 12 yrar, J JERNAl employing several thousand men, will be located in Salt Lake. Branches shot and killed by his older '' j (CHAr will b built to the Iron and coal de- Frank in San Francisco, the an "As far posits of Utah. A branch will be built being caused by a friendly sounv,; as the widot , yers wer toy rifle. to Fioche, provided Investigations now iiJtterinff Father John Cronstadt of St. pei a rose tot in progress show it desirable. A whirl branch will be built to Tonopah, If de- burg, says that the Jews, not (vf of tlons, are to blame for the Risk velopments Justify the promises .Harold the present. A branch will probably massacre, and that the Christiana J. 't wlthai tl0 plan be built to the nitrate beds of Califor- fared worse. nia. Every good mining district near Chauncey Dewey, Clyde Wilson i obS the mala line will he developed by W. J. McBride, charged with the rf i,om slush jranches. The papers finally trans- der of the Berry family In KatJ lusaman ferring all of the Oregon Short Lino have been bound over to the d.y 1y ,S had r south of Salt Lake to the San Pedro, court without bail. se men Los Angeles & Salt Lake company Venezuela t The the bes has government TuesIn New York next will be signed n lter wat to due $60,000 this no Germany Everything posday or Wednesday. , ti forget sible will be done to build up Salt as stipulated in the protocol. In Par M she the Lake, the eastern terminus of l the sec liquidation of the German tli new railroad, which Is to be known as against Venezuela. 4,1 to c the Salt Lake route." he dtell Arthur Gibbs, aged IS, and v 9 could FOUGHT FOR HIS LIFE. Reardon, 15 years old, were t 'jjre was near the McCausland opera house J I .r Chief of Police of Dillon, Mont, Has "You w East St. Louis by falling froraij1 he, tnr Battle With Hobos. i J on which they were playing. o sant j In s fight with a gang of nine hobos, tm, I w While trying to arrest a mystcr... Chief of Police Stone of Dillon, Mont., seems man In the fashionable Ro hello y! it for tl shot and instantly killed the leader. tu. residence section of New Rochelle, twelve! They were camped In the willows at Y., Policeman was shot n I' '' 0'IIern the south edge of town, and when the killed. I The murderer escaped. chief, in making his rounds, appeared in The betthe crops valley in that vicinity, he was viciously attacked by the entire gang. They were lone and Ileppner, Ore., were armed with clubs and stones, except stroyed by the recent flood. This, t the damage to the railway, will the leader, who had an ugly gun. When attacked Chief Stone walked tho total property loss to $lino,Oy? into his assailants and was knocking Major James G. Pond, the r them right and left when their leader known manager of lectures and took a shot at the chief, the bullet ers, is dead at his home In Jersey Ck shawl. as the result of an operation on Ju Joht n grazing his neck. In the officer then drew 17, In which his right leg was fi was tated. nigh hobo before own the and j his gun, Opinion at Bogota is changing far could fire again shot him through the heart and secured the big revolver he ably regarding the ratification of ti aw thai carried. At this Juncture Policeman canal treaty. The rf tijat It Grace arrived upon the scene, and nouneement and names of the pres!'? ( after an obstinate fight all the gang of officers are antlot? A rat lng who congress one, in Jail except were lodged f I 'Inilt-succeeeded in escaping. The n.en awaited. were all drunk, and when they attackThe court of appeals at Frankfor JAml nu h r and ed the chief told him they had heard Ky., has declined to grant a hearir li.'W cha of him and intended to kill him. of the cases of Claude O'Brien ar tike a su i "No o Earl Whitney, the Memphis boys A NEW WAR IN VENEZUELA. vieted of the murder of A. B. Chian i so absul Heavin' Lieutenant, With Two Thousand Lexington. so pure Men, Starts a Revolution. The engagement Is annoinrrd r.f j unable evil In A Venezuelan i government agent Miss Ella Clark of Ixs Angeles, long as who has arrived at Laguayra, Vene- ot United States Senator W. A. Civ b truly zuela, from Ciudad de Bolivar, report- of Montana, and Rev. J. M. New. She not tur ed that General Rolando, the only lieu- pastor of the Behtesda Presbyteri natural tenant of General Matos, the revolu- churrh of Los Angeles. j' unrig. an who army possesses leader, Militia companies from Independot tionary I SI. 8 of .which numbers about 2,000 men, and Waterloo and f You Marquoketa have (III. Il is stationed at Ciudad de Bolivar, and rived at Dubuque, Iowa, and are n tie Matos who refused to follow General guarding the property of the street', .with hi In his flight from Venezuela to the rompany. Operation of ears win I ei man l ha Curacao. haB proclaimed resumed under militia guard. Island of I tr liea himself chief of a new revolution An investigaton will bo made thin a against President Castro. Rolando, order bureau and the dead if t ore who has guns and ammunition, is look ed upon as likely to offer a de- ter office. Both of the bureaus hai'j iriilch termined resistance to tho Venezuelan considerable money, and the lnv; hS'lnwt with government forces if the latter attack gat ion is to make sure of precast ur- upi him. There are no specific charges. fi ale Women Fear Another Flood. tth o' The emigration figures fer - baud. Many women declare that they will 1903, show that moro than twice am never live In the town of Ileppner, She i many persons emigrated from D iQoktn? Ore., again, and are Imploring their mark to America as during the : great, families to desert the place. This "AmerlM period last year, and the had vr feeling does not wear off, and it is ex fever" shows no th of abating. I signs pectod that nightly refuge will he with iii and E. T. Fetch of Jefferson, O.. sought for some time yet at the pubover t lic buildings and churches which C. Krarup of New York left Sun Fr.j tli sli stand well up on the hill. Plenty of cisco last week in a twelve . krni8 j blankets were to be had and beds were fir at Improvised on the floors and benches. power single cylinder gasoline bcj lh" vo! he lovi Despite the endeavor to soothe and car of American make, with the calm prevalent hysteria, the people tentlon of traveling through to S generally are under the spell of horror York. and business has been abandoned. a fight between three striL-No End of Bad Luck. man in linemen and a While John Boyd, a Butte mining dianapoll?, Ind., A. C. IlavenH, a s: man, was dressing Wednesday for his er, was shot in the shoulder. Gt1" wending, which was to have occurred H. Dean, the roan, wW that afternoon, he received a cable- rested. He says he was attarkedU gram from England saying that bis the strikers. mother Is dead, and a minute or so Made by the repented later a special delivery letter was fusals ofdesperate Olive a concert Foster, In brought him, Raying that his father, T to Edward marry him. another part of England, had murdered singer, 21 fla sister. The unfortunate shot and probably groom Boyd's years old, fell into a fit at the double tld wounded the as she Rat In t;, girl of 111, and tho was - p Cosgrlff Bros., the big merchants, bankers and sheepmen, have purchased the business and stock of the Opal Supply company at Opal, Wyo. The deal was consummated on the 17th. The transfer Involves a cash payment of $50,000. Nelson Innes, formerly one of the best known sporting writers In the country, died in Denver last week of Mr. .Innes' illness was consumption. tho result of a cold contracted while attending the fight at Carson City. Ab the result of the recent announcement, on tho part of the miners in southern Carbon county, Wyo., that all sheepmen must keep their flocks out of (he mountains, bitter feeling exists between the two factions, which which may result In bloodshed. James Crlmmins, construction foreman for the Intcrurbnn railroad, was killed near Auburn,' Wash., last week. He was riding on a fiat car when three horses rushed on the track in front of the car, derailing it. Both his legs were cut off near tho body. It is now generally admin! U. S. dro-- Uncle Sam Does N9t Recognize King About OS miles from Miles City, Mont, Tim Kennody last week discovered a deep hole in the ground near a coal bank, from which Issues smoke and hot vapor. It is suspected it may be a coal vein on fire. THE A Railroad For Central Alaska. . WILL BE FINISHED WITHIN NEXT TWO YEARS. T; GIRL FIGHTS COUGAR. The gold output of Alaska is now $30,000,000 per year, and will be greatly Increased by the early building of a new railroad from the southern coast of Resurrection bay northward to the Tanana river, definite announcement of which was made In Chicago Saturday. The Reward Construction company of Chicago ha3 secured the contract for. the building and equipping of 413 miles of Alaska Central railway, from Resurrection bay northward through the Cook inlet country and up the Sussltna valley to the Tanana river, 150 miles above its junction with tho Yukon. Peter. news summit! THE SAN lEDltt) ROAD ENGLISH BLUEBEARD. SIX THOUSAND SLAIN JUBA WANTS TREATY THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. FROM A BEAR. And Found Man Hs Had Been Hunting for Some Time. who escaped William Robinson, from tho convicts' camp near Las Vegas, N. M., several days ago, has been recaptured by the guard from whom he escaped. The guard was running from a bear, after fulling to kill it. when lie tan on to Robinson. As Hu- - bear did not chase the guard lie turned his attention to tin- - convict. who. having bad a strenuous was quite willing to return. Do you see her? Stores of Dynamite In Prison Enough giant powder and nitro-glserine was found In tho Colorado pen! tentlarv Tuesday to blow np the en tire prison. This discovery was made after the convicts had attempted to escape on tho previous day were put through the sweating process. The explosives were rom ealed In the wall of ore of t tie shops. It Is believed that the was nianufae tilled by Kirk Kuykendall, tho con vie t who wns killed at the time of the revolt (f llie ronvbts. y nliro-glyeerln- postings wedding poned. Jew Baiter Stabbed In Neck. the notorious Jew Kroushevan, baiter and editor of the organ In Kishlneff, the Bessarabetz the articles in which are believed to have been largely responsible for the massacre of the Jews In Kishlneff, was attacked by a purty of Jews in the streets of St. Petersburg and stabbed In the neck by one of the Jews. The wound is not believed to bo fatal. Ills assailant was captured and proved to be a former student of the polytech nlc school at Klcff. anti-Semiti- c crowded balcony of a music hall 1 f Coney Island. Ci John Edolsteln of Jersey dreamed thnt burglars had entered!, home. He sprang out of beJ struck his head on a projection. T hock caused a clot of bltsxl to e on hts brain, resulting In nienlnf which caused death. WM A stroke of lightning that ; Martin Condon, superintendent oft Penn mines, at Lcadvlllflv was ,nV the pause of an accdont that have killed four of his miner. shock causing tho engineer to control of tho engine for a motnont tiu. Isstii "B |