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Show I THE SPANISH FORK PRESS TERRIFIED DANCING I Publisher ANDREW JENSEN, "SPANISH FORK UTAH T and number of new residence In buildings are under construction Green River. of valuation The total assessed Summit county, just reported by the county assessor, is ft, 625,856. The track of the Western Pacific Is now 136 miles west of Salt Lake City, which brings It fourteen miles Into Nevada. A gang of hobos broke Into a box car at Cokon and while In the act of looting the car were surprised and captured. After the heavy rains of the first part of the past week an excellent crop Is assured throughout the Paro-wasection. Bear river Is now higher than fo years. In many places It is over the banks, and the tributary creeks are also very" high. linemen were escorts Two d to the city limits of Park City by about 200 union men and warned to sever return to the city. Grain in the vicinity of Randolph Is looking very good and the hay crops also. The grass is In good shape In the hills for the stock on the range. James Ward, a miner of Bingham, was fatally Injured by a premature blast, his eyes being torn out and both arms torn ff by the terrific explosion. The report of the 8alt Lake City board of health for the week ending May 31, 1907, ihowB 38 births, 22 males and 16 females ; 20 deaths, 12 males and 8 females. . n non-unio- n tot, Mary Cochran, a ate a quantity of laxative pllla which she had found on a shelf In her home In Salt Lake City, and died before three-year-ol- d medical aid could be aummoned. Horton Hammond of Providence, cut his knee cap very badly with a was drawing knife. A physician called and found It necessary to take several stitches to close up the h ound. Sylvan Park, the only strictly tern- perance resort in Weber county, was thrown open to the public on Decoration day. The resort Is on the car line and but six blocks from the business center. ' It is predicted that Price will be a city of 5000 population within five years. There is much being done and projected around there ,to justify the conclusion that this la a conservative MtRuate, The report. of the assessor of Summit county on live stock shows that there Is In that county 2152 head ot horses and mules, .9933 cattle, 37,867 sheep and goats, and 26 swine, valued at 1377,201. Lightning struck a barn owned by Mrs. Jacob Rensch, of ML Pleasant, and killed three cows and a horse. The hay In the barn was not set on fire, and scarcely any damage at all was done to the barn. The Lehl city fathers have purt chased a sheet Iron liberty In a cement founand It set will pole, dation on the city square. Old Glory will float front Its topmast on holidays and state occasions. The district schools of Summit county have just completed a very auccessful year, and the class of graduates Is the largest for a number of years. The average per cent received by the pupils Is higher that, for previous years. Tom Brown of Park City climbed a pole to disentangle his kite, which had become caught In the wires, and grasped a live wire which buined his hands severely and caused him to fall - 200-foo- . feet. He will recover. son o Kdmund, the Lewis E. Wilhelm, of Greenville, Cache county', met with an accident the other day by which he utay lose the sight of one of his eyes. The little fellow was striking a bottle with an ax and particles of glass flew in his eye, Perret Noordu, a laborer,, and Thomas FreUerlckson, an air Inspector, were run down by a freight car lu the Salt Lake yards. It Is likely that Frederlckson will lose one foot, amnecessary. putation probably being severe scalp Koorda received a wound. Dnvid Morgan, a pioneer of Vtah, who reached Ogden from Swansea, Wales, In 1S54, and engaged In the freighting business front Salt Lake to Los Angeles and through Idaho, Montana and Nevada, died In Rock Creek Ida., on May 28 of hemorrhage of the brain, nged 77 years. The frame house of George Searlcs, Jr., located three miles southwest of Roosevelt, was totally destroyed b) fire. All the contents of the honso, except the bedding, went up In smoke. Mrs. Searles was alone with her batw and only succeeded In getting ths bed ling out of the house. twenty-fiv- e FELL TWELVE FEET Defendant In Conspiracy Trial Was Very Sick Man for a Short Time. victory Paris. Two women fell into a cage of lions In the Apollo, a new music ball only recently opened, and were nearly eaten up. The spectacle was Physicians Called and Sick Man Is much more sensational than had been Soon Out of Danger and Ready Intended by the program. The two to Proceed With Trial on women were tight rope dancers and Monday Morning. were supposed to perform a series of clever feats on a rope stretched across the stage, and under which there was Boise, Ida. William D. Haywood a big cage with two lions. The top was seized with a sudden Illness early of the cage was left open, so that the Saturday morning and was unable to lions could see , the women perform appear In court. His trial on the over their heads, and the public lng charge that he murdered former Govsame time enjoy the de ernor Steunenberg was adjourned un- could at the sensation of terror. The lions til Monday. Haywood was restless lightful in the feats no as took rule a Interest and ill most of Friday and early Satwalkers. of the However, urday morning began crying In pain. . from their awakened Buddenr Two hurriedly summoned physicians ln when the ,nd,fference 8napped rope announced, after examining him, that of a middle ln the twain performance he was suffering from an scute In- Measures for the an the unhappy women fell literally testinal toxemia. the JaWB the "on8, The wild alleviation of the pain ln his abdo-men and head Included the admlnls-- beasts naturally did not understanu tratlon of morphine, and dizziness I the situation and mauled and clawed and nausea caused by the drug, rath-- the women terribly. One of the worn-,enough to tvan tha original trouble were re- - ea had PrpBence ot Blind floor of the remain prostrate on the sponsible for his Inability to go to tbecage and gqcceeded In crawling out, I court room In the afternoon. while her companion was so imprudI Haywood Is a hearty eater, and ent as to stand up and was being since the trial began has stopped tak-- mangled by the lions. The audience I lng exercise, and these conditions, was in a panic, women screamed wltu added to the worry and strain of the terror and fainted. After consider-trialare believed to be responsible I abl efforts the remaining woman was for the attack. The earlier suffering finally rescu-from the cage, of the prisoner created the Impression thnt he was quite seriously ill, and It AMBITION OF BOSS CROKER. was thought that an extended inter- ruptlon of the trial was Inevitable. Exile Said to Cherish Desire to Enter e tlght-rop- I 1 1 1 I 1 I , . British ParliamenL HOLDS BOOKS FOR WAGE8. London. The newspapers are re- Colorado Girl Goes to Jail Rather I riving the report that Richard Croker I Than be Defrauded. cherishes an ambition to enter the Colorado Springs. Because Exlne I British parliament as an Irish nation Fuller refused to be dissuaded from I alist member. Recently Mr. . Croker her belief that possession Is nine I has taken an Interest In the work of points of law, she Is spending her I the nationalists, made contributions hours in a cell at the county jail. She I to the party funds, lent automobiles was brought Into court because she I fop electioneering" purposes and d to surrender the books of the I titled himself with the party by y I Murphy Mining company, which pearing on the platform at the recent she acknowledges to be in her pos- - convention in Dublin. It is doubtful, session. Miss Fuller claims about 860 however. If Mr. Croker would be for work done upon the books. I lng to foreswear his American citizen more doubtful if he When the mining company demurred I Bip and I to to immediate payment of the turn could find a a candid'te, or if the take hira up In-Miss Fuller lu alleged to have party leaders will welcome the acquP formed the officers that as long ns I sltion of a politician of such a master-- ' payment was deferred, Just so long I ful nature. would they seek In- vain for the. FUTURE MOTIVE POWER, books. She was sentenced to jail un-- l til she would consent to turn over the books. 'Til stay ln Jail till I rot, she I Remarkable Prediction Made By Sir snlit, "but I Uhant tell where theyj Hugh Bell Regarding Electricity. are. London. A remarkable forecast has just been made by Sir Hugh Bell, FOR LOVE OF WOMAN. the new president of the Iron and Baron Turna Laborer to Win Fair I steel institute, in his presidential ad-- . I American Bride. dre9a Mo. Paul von Baron Zglit-Speaking of the great Improvements Joplin, ski of Berlin, Germany, and Miss I In shipbuilding he suggested that In a Helen Nicholson of this city were I hundred years, with little or no mamarried at the home of the bride's I chinery, a ship would speed on her I way drawn by electric force gener- parents at high noon Saturday. Miss Nicholson Is the daughter of I ated at Niagara and transmitted over Frank C. Nicholson, a wealthy mine I the Atlantic by wireless telegraph, operator and engineer. She met her I Strange as this forecast might be, husband in Paris a year ago, while I he said it was no more Incredible I than what had happened since 1807. visiting the capitals of Europe. The baron for the pust three months I Tho world moved on In a succession has been working In the mines here of dreania and thelr fu,flllmeuL as a spade hand In order to become1 Sir Hugh Bell said that It was ab- familiar with the operation of the to do better than property over which he will have con- solutely impossible trol, and in order to prove his worthi- to venture a guess as to the march of ness of the love of the rich mine own- science in the immediate future, and that almost anything might he exer's daughter. , pected to hapimn. MUST WEAR TIES. Growth of Federation of Miners. Government Takes No Note of ReligDenver. An increase of 10,000 in ious Scruples of Letter Carrier!. the membership of the Western Fed- General I erstion of Miners will be shown by Washington. Postmaster I Veyer, In answer to a letter from a the reports to be presented at the thelnua! convention which will meet ln carrier asking "Whether I Denver for Is of June 10th. In the absence ot ties wearing compulsory a member ot a religtous sect that does I President Charles 11. Moyer, who Is not allow Its members to w ear ties at I In prison ln Idaho awaiting trial on I the charge of complicity In the mur all" has replied: Gvraor Fr!nk Ste,un "Under the postal regulations, if a def of erg. C. h. Mahoney, first letter carrier wishes to wear a shirt I I President, will preside. James he must also wear a turn-dowctiug secretary ln place ot with a dark tie and a neat belL" llaywood. Western Woman Wins Honors. Passenger Train Wrecked. Washington. Mrs. Gertrude G. Grey San Antonio, Tex. One man was of Nevada has been awarded the gold Killed and a score of persona medal by the Coreoran School of Art Instantly some of them fatally, by the Injured, Mrs. at lu annual commencement. w recking of east bound passenger Grey has studied nit with unceasing No, 8 Sunday morning two milea train diligence for the last five years In this west of Lozier, a small statiou on the city. Before that she practiced law In Southern Pacific. The derailment Nevada, having been the first woman WBH the re,,,llt cither of train wreck- In Phel admitted to the bar thnt state, ,.ra or defective steel, though the pus-til. go to Europe soon to engage lnJtlVe caUse had not been determined at last reports. lden-refuse- 1 will-salar- 1 - an-ma- ; fo'r ice-wai- st Kir-coll- ar n Toledo Is Blamed. GuatemaU Ulty.-- The government declares that Genera! Salvador To-I- f ledo. the Guatemalan revolutionist, Is about to undertake an active campaign against President Cabrera. Is the author of the recent attempt upon the president, ns well as the Instigator of the assassination of Barrtllaa In Mexico City, ills motive was Jealousy. General Toledo Is now making preparations with President Zrlaya of Nicaragua for an organized Invasion of Salvador sad Guatemala. I Tt. Mrtk. OI jWrM ter of Newark, N, iI( on the 29th In a full B! HONS A Sensational Scene That Was Not on the Program In a Paris Music Hall. UTAII STATE NEWS A ATTACKED G1S Montana Man Electrocuted. ting Helena. the odor three-quarte- r flesh, of an burning hour arter Charles Both well, trana-wh- o forntl.r t.Xp,.rt for tha Westlnghouse company, had gone Inside ot a transformer at the power plant ot mo Helena Power Transmission company at Luke Hauser, tha tender made an Investigation and found Ilothwell He died a few minutes uter. II had cotue lu contact lth A Mere wire. Many Persons Injured by the Collapse of Floor During: men. In River on T. F. Eckman killed Payette Tragedy Occure Leah w of Out Party Men a resort near Chicago and Nine Idaho, a elded, because the girl refnM . of Sixteen Escaping Death. ry him. to Boise, Idaho. While attempting in make a landing above the rapids Corner Stone Laying: from miles twelve Payette river, about men were valley, seven Garden which they boats two The Ladders Were Quickly Secured and drowned. over the rapcarried were were using the Unfortunate Ones Soon Reocnine other The ids and swamped. moved From Their Perilous a hard battle cupants of the boats had Was Child Positions. to reach managed but their lives, for Only One Fatally Bert are: men shore. The drowned Tom Hamilton, Ure, Mel Curtis, Joe Dave Highland, Frank Fitzgerald, of Boden. Joe Wilkesbarre, Pa. At the laying unthe cornerstone of St. Marys Greek So far as can be learned all are Catholic church Thursday afternoon married men. The force of sixteen a temporary flooring collapsed, pre- men ln the two boats were engaged in cipitating about sixty persons Into a a log drive for the Idaho White Pine Ladders Mining company. After portaging cellar, twelve feet below. were secured and with the aid of the large fall, the first boat attempted to police the Injured were removed from land and tie up for the night at the their perilous position. Some were head of one of the rapids. It failed to able to walk to their homes, while make the landing and the boat was others were removed to hospitals ln folswept down. The second boat ambulances. lowed the first, the occupants thinking The accident. It Is said, was due to their comrades bad passed the rapids new Insufficient bracing beneath the floor. safely, and were also swamped by the Bishop Huban, of Scranton, escaped torrent. with a severe jolting. The priests Injured were: Father FRENCH SEAMEN STRIKE. C. Sopey, rector of the church, bruised and injured about the body; Father Gabriel C. Sopey, of Perth Amboy, N. Complete Paralysis of Country's Com merce Feared. J., brother of the local pastor, bruised about the body and tongue badly InA Paris. general strike of sailors jured; Father Kossy, of Aldcn, Pa.; and others belonging to the French Father Jacovlcs, of Scranton. Father Loughran, of Scranton, who suffered naval reserve, began at almost all the severe bruises and lacerations. ports of France at daylight on Friday, y A child of Kaspar of this city, who was among and threatens the complete paralysis the Injured died Thursday night. of French commerce. The navigation committees are making energetic repHEAVY STORMS STRIKE TEXAS. resentations to the government, claimmovement is not directed Many Houses Wrecked or Washed ing that the and saying that unless them, against Away by Raging Water. It is settled it will cause immediately Houston, Tex. A series of violent commerce. untold French to Injury storms, electrical and cyclonic ln charreserve The naval nearly comprise acter, accompanied by successive cloudbursts, swept over Houston and the entire maritime population envicinity during Wednesday night and gaged ln seafaring life and number about 117,o00 men, of whom 25,000 are serving in the navy. In addition to practically all the steamers of the mercantile marine, most of the long shoremen belong to the naval reserve. The strike was declared by the executive committee of the National Seamens union because the government's new bill increasing pensions from' 140.80 to f 72.50 In' the case of seamen and from 3156 to 3200 In the case of captains Is regarded by the members of the union as being Kail-nnszk- LADDER WAS ROTTEN. Thursday morning. The country for miles Is covered with water. Railroad traffic Is almost completely suspended. have been Many houses wrecked or washed away by Buffalo which bayou, has passed all previous high water records and is still rising. The rain continued until noon Thursday. Incalculable damage has been done In this vicinity and It Is expected that reports from Texas rivers. which are rising rapidly, will show the worst flood conditions In the history of Texas. So far no deaths from the storm have been reported. PATRICK HENRY DAY. William Jennings Bryan Principal Orator at Celebration. Norfolk, Va. The anniversary of the passage by the Virginia house of burgesses on May 30, 1765, of Patrick Henry's famous resolution condemning the British stamp act, was celebrated as Patrick Henry day at the Jamestown exposition on Thursday with William J. Bryan as the central figure of attraction. Mr. Bryan delivered an address In the convention hall upon the exposition grounds before 2,000 people upon the theme "Taxation Without Representation Is Tyranny." Hart Defeated by Schreck. Tonopah, Nev. In a terrlflc battle lasting a minute over twenty rounds. Mike Schreck gained the decision over Marvin Hart when the latter was all but knocked out. In the early rounds Hart forced the fighting, gradually weakened until In the seventh a knockout seemed Inevitable, The Kentuckian rallied quickly and honors were even up to tho thirteenth. This and the succeeding nmnds were very fast, both men trying time and again . to laud the Hart's seconds threw up the sponge In the The claim Is made thnt Hart entered the fight with a broken wrist. sleep-maker- twen-ty-firs- TERRIBLE INDIANA TRAGEDY. Mont.-Detec- Boye Are Blown to Pieces by ploelon of Powder, Terre Haute, 1ml. By the explosion of several hundred pounds of powder at the storage warehouse of the Farnsworth mill, near Sullivan, Wednesday afternoon. Claude Davis, aged 6. and Paul Keen, aged 9, were blown to pieces, and three other hoys were sop. jously hurt. It Is supposed that the boys accidentally set the building uo Mining Man Falla to Bottom of Shaft and Is Killed. Salt Lake City. George L. Moats, of the Ranch Real Estate & Improvement company of Salt Lake, and well known in mining circles in this city, met his death in an accident at the Four Metals mine at Dugway, Tooele county, Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Moats, who was Inter ested in the Four Metals property was visiting it on a tour of Inspection He went down the shaft to the 300 foot level In safety, and then started down a ladder to the bottom of the shaft, a distance of about 100 feet The ladder was old and rotten, ano when Mr. Moats had descended aboul fifteen feet It gave way under him and he fell to the bottom of the shart a distance or abqut 85 feet, his body being terribly crushed and mangled An entire family 0f tit were drowned near Honey Texas, as a result of the 7 udden of a creek. He Salary advances averaging,, cent all around have been grtsi the Burlington to employ, 0,(1 entire system. Three persons were kllta asphyxiation and another come In a Lawton avenue J 1001 house, SL Louis. While ferrying a man ten, North Platte river the boat turtle and Archie Sheldon of r way, Neb., wa drowned. ' The passenger far, has been approved by Governor two-ce- nt een of Illinois. This bill am t a mile limit straight " railroads In Illinois. As the result of a collision oi ley cars at Elyria, Ohio, on nation day, four people were killed thirteen seriously Injured, eight two-cen- whom will probably die. The absolutist regime Is noil, operation in Portugal. King Ck has signed a number of dec granting subsidies and Increase salaries of civil servants, etc. George Burnham, Jr, former j al counsel of the Mutual Resene Insurance company, who is not, lng a term In Sing Sing for F larceny. Is to have a new trial The case agalnBt Mrs. Cru charged with the murder ot her band at Page, N. D last Febr; has been dismissed. Two juries agreed, the last one being oat I hours. - The appeal of Count Bonl dt ; tellane against the decision of court, granting a divorce to hit i has again been postponed. It will not be heard until Dm 1 her. The fate of the two lieutenant: engineers who ascended from shot, England, ln a balloon os 28, during a review In honor of Ptj Fushlml of Japan, still remain mystery. The state senate of New Tod a vote of 38 to 8 passed the bly bill providing for a recount: ballots cast in the McClellasto V itere "jtle coi Dt ( is L :ad JCi 1 election of her father and then set fire to garments and was burned to deal their home ln Chicago. The Russian famine committee notified its representatives la don and New York that the time arrived to cease agitation for tors subscription, as Russia now is a& care for her own people. What is believed to be cvIJenc a brutal murder was discovered!: ' Ryan soap works in Cincinnati mutilated and almost completely sumed body of a man was fous: the furnace of the factory. Salvador San Fellppe, a well b' agriculturist and c cj Hll lag But ar i dli ot lids 1905 li S mayorallty York city. Miss Philander Swlnnen, 34 fo old, believed to be demented, hoti killed her mother, attempted to Italian oil sin lla at, id I with ib i Ilu he mo) dei 1thatlo- cle Iak iho I it 1 of dy .Me res residing Sau Jose, was murdered morning at about 9:30 oclock hj brother, Fclippo. Tho murder the result of a quarrel betweea brothers. a 'i son bul i:uti :iu to ir" sensational Concerning Telegraphers Will Not Strike. about expectations of war tot1 New York. The threatened strike Mexico and Gautemala, Amb1 of 20,000 telegraphers ugainst the Creel of Mexico said: "Th'1 Western I it Ion Telegruph company nothing pending and no rfa8, will not take place. The officials ol any fear of war between the t the company and Samuel J. Stnnll tries." national president of the Commercial Dispatches received from relegraphers Union of America, have rebellot In been conference for several dave Morocco, says that the regarding the situation affecting the the Pretender has routed the operators. Friday night Mr. Small with great loss. The announced that there would be nr troops are said to bo In to' Jf. trtWtps atrlke. Iu settling their with with the Pretenders force to dispute the corporation the win a great victory. telegraphers will closely. The monthly conuBratlT Iron Workers Tire of ment of the government receipt Play. tor San brancisco. The first rift In the expenditures shows that Series of strikes and were unsettled lnhoi 1907, the total receipt ItM1, llHVe Z11lw.Whl,h, ovprshadowed 012, and the expenditures 1,10 many weeks or- leaving a surplus fo tlm .rrod Friday when the 33,575,212. strike of i H O Ironworkers was amleablv settled The Investigation of tho N The men went out several week , police department In cuitnectln for un Kht-h,work Tv and an Inerenae n ha dl wages the Gould divorce case 11,0 rnl,, ir,,n no criminal evidence ORaln " Iron Works and all tho officers Involved, according" statement ntado by Police sloner Bingham. Alleged Embezrler Suicides. Tha French minister of iarl11' Los Angeles, While received advices to tho effect tHkan f0 l,eg r t bulkhouds of the French Ottorney',, m,,0 Clianzy, that went ashore atlHc Sueeu May ff,i ronipany, by whom ho tho Saddle Islands, that the crew abandoned to J """ or and that she sank. Th ; What Is said to bo tho hlshfJt' !' lor r d bom my ma: tfi t I '! lea! hi adl ret and "si lOB'l 1.1 r of sn't - 1 ZK'S!,nQHh ''ed, 10V It s tea ii vt 'law k. bi Xt ode C1 '"l ;r. :r Tim un, way in the 7 1 Strict uttorney's'S;:;,1 removed to tin, a Was condition. 'wi, "" . 'Blr- - ever paid for a bull at a sale la America waa receive l" ), t r ort in I r to like 115 alo of T. II. Cooper's blooded was ed stock at his farm. LW,r7 ho,plul a Pa., lust week. Tho bull. Klockwell, was sold for ,w at'l kno |