Show BOTH LEGS BADLY FROZEN GEORGE STROHMATER ATTEMPTS TO CROSS THE MOUNTAINS Wandered Six Days Without Food or Shelter and Will Probably Die Said That He Was Fleeing from Justice George Strohmaler the German who was recently Indicted by the grand jury for fornication alleged to have been committed with Marie Lingg also a native of Fatherland under circumstances circum-stances already familiar to the public has gotten into a worse trouble than his first Strohmaier had a preliminary prelmlnar hearing before Justice Harvey and was held in the sum of 500 bonds The I bond was subsequently reduced to 100 pending his triai Louis Hobein and one W A Sidney became his sureties and since then he ha been boarding at Mr Hobeins house on State street until a week ago last Thursday when he suddenly disappeared without say Ing anything to his bondsmen Mr Hobein soon came to the con I elusion that he had skipped out and I left his sureties to settle the score The Sheriff wib notified and a warrant for his arrest Issued but up till last Friday nothing was heard of him On that day a trapper named Bill Strat man who makes his home in a cabin in the east mountains came to Ho hems saloon with some beaver skins to sell In the course of conversation conversaton he told of an extraordinary looking Dutchman who came to his cabin a few days before In a most pitiable plight pitable LIMBS FROZEN He was in an exhausted condition and his clothing was frozen stiff and I stff coated with ice His lower limbs were also frozen and it was with trront Aim culty that his shoes and pants were cut from his feet and iiCpat said legs sod he had been wandering among the mountains for six days without food and had been out in the recent severe storms The trappers did all they could for him but that was but little The description of the man tallied with that of Strohmaler and it proved to be he Arrangements were made for bringing him t the city and yesterday the trapper Stratman and his tapper companion com-panion Bruce Stafford brought him to Gogorza station on the Utah Cen tral road in a sleigh and thence by wagon to Louis Hobeins place He was in such a condition that medical assistance was absolutely necessary and Sheriff Hardy in whose charge he was placed by direction of the county physica sent him to the county infirmary in-firmary His legs were so badly frozen that it Is thought they will both have to be amputated and It is very doubtful I I doubt-ful If his life can be saved |