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Show THE SPANISH ANDREW JENSEN, well m Me roll his shoes and sorks, as about and $250 of money Nor did he have jewelry, was gone. hat. hta McMillan set the porters and train thinkcrew at work to find clothing, taken bad lend ft ing that some Joker The It but It whs not to be found. In the stops made frequent had TYPICAL CANADIAN INDIAN FORK PRESS $-- Publisher SPANISH FORK UTAH STATE NEWS UTAH have electrical storms Recent caused damage of at least 92,000 to the power plant at Ogden. Utah will spend $3,600 upon Its ex hlblt at the national Irrigation gress at Albuquerque, N. M. Lewis Jacobson con of Salt Lake City hot his great toe off while hunting, the gun being accidentally discharged. About 200 Balt Lakers took advan tage of the reduced railroad rates to go to Idaho on a Ashing trip last week. It Is announced that the Denver Rio Grande Is to begin work on Its new passenger depot in Balt Lake j City In a few days. Glen Mack, who was stabbed by W. Isakson during a fight In Ogden, and who wag reported to have been tnor-tall- y wounded, will recover. Mrs. Anna E. Pratt, who resides at Hale, Carbon county, was struck by a street car while visiting Salt Lake City and dangerously Injured. Laaron Pratt, one of the oldest printers In Utah, died in Balt Lake City last week at the age of 61, death being due to a stroke of paralysis. O. L. Callender, station agent for the Denver A Rio Grande at Robin son, has been bound over to the dls trlct court on a charge of having embezzled $500. Richard Jessop, a lineman In the employ of the Independent Telephone company, while cutting branchea from tree at Riverdule, fell to the ground and fractured both ankles. Clarence LItller, 25 years old, while crossing the O. 8. L. tracks In Balt Lake City, caught his foot In a frog and before he could extricate It a paslng locomotlvh crushed It badly. An effort will be made by the Utah delegates to the Irrigation congress to be held In Albuquerque, N. M., begin-BinSeptember 29, to take a band with them, to help advertise Utah. Led by prominent Irrigation men of Utah, a strong movement has been started to name Washington, D. C-- , as the place for holding the seventeenth national Irrigation congress In t ' - g 1909. One of the most miraculous escapes from a horrible death In Park City occurred last week, when John Mltchel, a young man employed attbe Ontario , mine, fell a distance of forty feet without being Injured. The Utah State Wool Growers association la In receipt of a letter from Philadelphia wool buyers offering 15 cents per pound net for the southern Utah wool now stored there under the association's storage plan. Green River will have a fruit festival September 9. The fruit showing around Green River la excellent this year. Apples weighing one pound each, and one weighing twenty ounces, are on exhibition. The latest feat of members of the lightrfingered gentry, la the reported theft from the home of a Salt Lake family of their kitchen table, the table being stolen at night when all the members of the household were In bed. While riding on a Salt Lake City street car, J. L. Lenzl, a boy, kicked at a dog which was running beside the car, lost hta balance and fell under the car, his right foot being so badly crushed that amputation was necessary. The Willard tabernacle was dedicated- on August 17 by President Francis M. Lyman of the quorum of apostles. The building as now completed, has been under construction since 1866, and therefore holds the record for long period of building. Mr. and Mrs. William Driver; pioneers of the state, celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage at their home In Ogden on August 16. They were married In England In 1858 and shortly afterward traveled to the United States and overland to Utah. Isaac Isldor, 65 years old, who had a clothing store in Ogden, was drowned In the Weber river last week, his body being found by boys while swimming In the river. The police scout the suicide theory, as Isldor had been In the habit of bathing la the river. William F. Carson, veteran confederate of the civil war and stage driver In the early days of the west, passed away last week at his home In Salt Lake City. He was a cousin of Kit Carson, the famous Indian fighter nd scout, and came west at the close of the war. occurred A serious accident at fountain Green when John Green fell from a load of hay, dislocating his shoulder, breaking hlB collar bone and cutting deep gashes In bis head. He la In a serious condition, the chances for his recovery being far from, bright The executive committee of the Willard Canyon Water company has made an Inspection of the source of the company's water and has deemed that the supply can be materially Increased. Many of the dead springs will be connected with the main etream In the canyon. At a meeting of the Utah state board of sheep commissioners held in Salt Lake City, an order was adopted calling for the inspection and dipping, if necessary, of all sheep being brought luto the state from other pecta of the country. Rams shipped $n must be dipped twice. - 1 WtUa hma ' ( Cree. Tht disappearing The above photograph Is a fine specimen of generation are, generally speaking, much finer men In appearance and character than thoae who have grown up In contact with civilization. ftipy right kg HIS CLOTHES STOLEN. AfEATLTHY MAN REACHED PITTS-BURIN HIS UNDERSHIRT. unique, certainly the meanest, sneak mho ever entered u Pullman car. While en route from Baltimore to Pittsburg over the Baltimore & Ohio railroad the thief stole every stitch Sneak Thief Completely Cleaned Out of clothing possessed by Mr. McMillan the Berth of William E. McMilwhile the latter slept. The lumber lan, and He Couldnt Borrow king, who weighs 200 pounds, had rea Pair of Pants. tired wearing only a little dinky athPittsburg, Pa. William E. McMil- letic undershirt lie had thla when he was waked, lan, president of the McMillan Lumber company. Chicago and Baltimore, and In addition be had been left bln was the victim of perhaps the most fancy vest, a great gaudy affair. Even ELOPER tlilef THE TICKETS FORGOT train thut at one night, and It Is supposed CotM thief sneak the of the stops board and carried off Mr. McMillans sort wardrobe wltbqut waiting to things out. The plight of McMillan, however, first was more pitiful than would at was racing Into appear, as the train there Pittsburg at great speed And who was not a man on the train so the weighed over 160 pounds, and of pants a pair question of borrowing for Mr. McMillan's 200 pound aeemed beyond question. who finally the Pullman conductor, that announced 137 pounds, weighed he had three pair of extra trouser In a locker. Mr. McMillan split two of the pairs trying to get Into them. ven partly, but the third pair held good, and. aided by a sheet kindly contributed by the porter, the lumber king was enabled to reach the bagwhere gage shed of the police station, for home to chance telephone he got a aid. "I am a peaceable man and I don t want to meet the man who stole my Tf I do clothes. said Mr. McMillan. I'm afraid I'll kill him. I traveled about 65,000 miles In the last 18 months, hut never had a trick like that played on me before. It don't look good to come racing Into a big city with nothing on but a short undershirt and a fancy vest, and a lot of splinter weights Into whose trousers you couldn't get one log offering you advice. - The young woman with the auburn hair and tan suit, which harmonized with It, had been studiously gazing at tbe pictures, but she saw the young man coming down the long gallery before be aaw her. Thus she was able to greet him with Just the proper air of polite aurprlse, unmixed with any apparent pleasure, which the peculiar situation demanded. So glad Why, Arthur! sLe said. to see you! The tall young man set his Jaw, Then you've had a change of mind havent you? he asked. ! I dont know wbat you are talking about, said the young woman in an Anyhow, Ive seen sc Injured tone. little of you of late aren't the pictures lovely? said the young man, who Very, bad not looked at them. He led the way to a vacant bench. "I don't know when Ive seen any pictures that I've enjoyed more. You ought to know why you havent seen me! The young woman with the auburn hair shook her head pensively and Im sure I dont know, she sadly. told him. It has made me feel very bad I hate to have my friends grow tired of me. Tbe tall young1 man stared at her and turned a faint purple. Well, I like that! be murmured Elizabeth, you have the most surpass log nerve of any girl who ever existed! Grown tired of you, Indeed! Lay the blame on me If you like! Still, bis. Wllhelmy went calling on friends, and when he returned he found a crowd In front of his brother's home. Tbe sight of his roll dangling on the clothesline was too much for him, and he collapsed with laughter. After the girl had washed the trousers she found the roll of bills, and with clothespins fastened each bn the line and left them unguarded. PAPAL DELEGATE TO UNITED STATES You Have the Most Chicago. William Meyers attempt ed to elope with Lillian, the 15 year old daughter of Mrs. Theresa Vald, but made the mistake of leaving the railroad tickets In bis room. When he returned for them, detectives placed him under arrest. Mrs. Vald rents furnished rooms and among her regular patrons was Meyers. Some weeks ago Meyers began to pay attention to the young daughter of his landlady. The mother objected because of the girl's age. Meyers persisted, and was ordered from tbe house. He declined to move. The other day Mrs. Vald had some business downtown, and. In order to keep her daughter from seeing Meyers, locked her In a room and took tbe key with her. Meyers procured a ladder and assisted the girl through i transom. They left the house, Intend tng to go to Michigan. In the meantime Mrs. Vald returned, and, finding aer daughter had escaped, reported ;he matter to the police. When Mey-rreturned for the tickets he was arrested. DOVE STUCK IN ORGAN PIPE. Church People Close Steeple and Birds 8eek Shelter Elsewhere. Pete le a Knowing Trout Mlnstead, Conn. Pete, a lone trout n a deep spring at Wlntergreen, the lummor borne of Mr. Stone, at High-an- d lake, answers to bis name, com-nto the surface whenever it Is ipoken. He also has been taught to tump out of the water to take worms rom a person's fingers. Pete is one of three trout placed ast summer In a small pond fed by :he spring.- He worked bis way up :he small underground stream Into the called spring during the winter. Sev-srtrout of Pete's size fully ten Inches long have been placed in the spring at different times this season to keep him company, but tbe InBtant they were released he attacked and killed them. Pete has kept tbe spring free of Insects an trogs. g William Walker S . valued at $40,000. Charles A. Clark of Alsen. g , dead, the result of a bullet JlSf tbe abdomen, inflicted by his wife. 'Mrs. dark wa. John Gluek, a wealthy brewer, and his wife were Cottagewood, Minn., when their Z, mobile wae struck by a train. Fierce forest fires, causlnr to timber. likely to total buJJ dollars are reported from several ,, tions of Vancouver Island, B. a iS1 William one Seibert, of the i,, organizers of the Republican and delegate to the first national! ventlon, died at Pittsburg laat vw aged 88 years. A decrease of $10,632,788 In over operating expenses and tareik shown by the annual statement, ! the Union Pacific and Southern w iw n clflc companies. was It announced at Republic headquarters in Chicago last that Speaker Joseph G. Cannon wra make a speaking tour of the eotmtrr beginning In September. Nineteen sentences of death ven signed in various parts of (he ba elan empire one day last week. Ta condemned at Lodz are peasant &. cerned in revolutionary actlvuiet Governor Folk of Missouri in granted a stay of execution of thirty days to Albert Fllley, under sentence of death for killing his wife, hi j. year-oldaughter and his brother Clay Fllley, George D. Horras, former cashier jf the failed Hot SpringB, S. D., National bank, has been sentenced to five yets In tbe federal penitentiary at Nm Leavenworth, Kan. He pleaded pfl-tto embezzllng$5, 000. By the premature explosion of tie ty pounds of dynamite In bo oil tel near Santa Rosa, N. M., William Ism was instantly killed and Michael Doyle, William Wlckstrom and Thor Connolly severely injured. Tbe Esperantlsts, who are bolding tbelr fourth international congrew Dresden, have decided to pnbhsk books in Esperanto for the blind, isd to prepare a proper exhibition to tin Information relative to Esperanta Judge Alton B. Parker, candidate for the presidency on the Democratic ticket four years ago, opened the Democratic campaign In Oregon it Portland on August 18, at a large ud enthusiastic meeting In that dty. ' Dr. Joseph Etch berg, a promtoert physician of Cincinnati, was drowned in Big Tupper lake, N. Y., while os fishing trip. In trying to land large pickerel his boat was capsized and he was thrown Into the water. Passengers from Guatemala City it at Mobile, rived Ala., on the sterner Harold say that tbe uprisings In Honduras were a part of the project et President Cabrera of Guatemala make General Morales president Honduras. Isaac Upham, a well known retired wholesale merchant of San Franclora while riding a bicycle at San Jo was struck by an automobile drives th by S. B. II unkins, president of to of German City bank, and received h Juries from which he died within u hour, Mrs. Jennie Roberts, 45 years old. h dead as the result of a murdcrou ot tack made on her while she lay a!f you you " In her bed at her home In Cincinnati. 1 he young man, glancing Bternly at Her face was smashed almost to her, detected signs of moisture on hei pulp. David M. Roberts, her hnstam lashes. ts being held by the police ca Elizabeth," he said, "dont do that! plclon. Hut honestly, youve treated me hor Walter Allen, a colored man. ribly. Now, havent you? several companions Jeered at "I didn't mean to, Arthur. said the cago policeman who had ordered to girl, with suspicious meekness. "J to move on late at night. An thought all the time that you simply counter between Allen and the 08 weren't Interested In me any more!" followed, with the result that The young man looked a little doubt- was shot and seriously wounded ful. but the tear on her . eyelashes the back. receded swung the balance In her favor. According to advices "I dont see how you could even London from Geneva, the leader to dream that, he said. "I was Just cut the Young Turk party are up over your conduct with that this of In that city at the end sible Cummings. So I stayed away. J to discuss the question of pp0V thought that waa what you wanted the sultan of Turkey, and. In the I didnt want to bother you. of an affirmative decision, to seiec "I dont see how you could be so successor. , foolish! sighed the girl. Japan has' formally slgnW readiness to negotiate a scaling ' Elizabeth" said the young man, ventlon with Russia similar to Ms cut the pictures and go some and the where for dlnner-a- nd , the theater lsh convention. Through the after. You can telephone home." Bitlon of the south half of the oww The young woman looked slightly of Saghalin, Japan becomes nonplused. Seal island. "Thats so good of you, Arthur, she ' The Chinese commissioners i murmured, "but-but--well, you eee the matter In charge liav e t0 do those very tor thlngr tbe parade grounds one h Ir' Cumn,lnB8- beet Hes to pla' il be here of Amoy, China, as the Just about 15 minutes." the entertainment of the offlra men of the American battleship' iilh.fll0uns man Kot t0 h,s eet In manner. when the vessels reach there Well, It matter In the least, not In the doesnt ter part of October. least," MI rea,Iy mu8t be SoA tiger and a bull were pl now. ng How you can endure the stout cage on a private 08(3 , w nane chatter of that-a- nd here 1 Marseilles, Prance, end go rrba OP. Sorrf to havemeant what yu Mid. combat by tbe spectators . ft bothered you! Good wounded the tiger in the , combat by tbe spectators Woman smiled as Bbe made a dencint upon the c broke up the spectacle. c Thon Bhe extract , ed Brigadier General Allen, has army, nal officer of the Information that the W Alaskan military end tclegw. rt , tern had been extended to r Arthur!" Daily News. Chtcagi Alaska, by the construction branch from the exh.Ing Montague Island to Cordov j There Is a sequel to the fastening up of all possible entrances to Trinity church ateeple with the purpose of shutting out pigeons that had overrun the belfry. Flying about, . lost and bewildered, the birds have since behaved In the saddest fashion, and even when tbe shades of twilight settled Into dusk these birds, accustomed like all others but owls to go to roost with the sun. circled round and round the belfry. During the services, the choir and ongregatlon were surprised when a pretty pigeon made Its appearance a( .he end of one of the tubes of the pipe organ. The bird bad flown down one of the ornamental pipes and was only able to get its head out at the lower end. The organ will have to be torn apart to get the pigeon out Surpapaing what could a fellow do when you were so extraordinarily busy all tbe time? One never saw you except from the middle distance either going or getting back from somewhere with that that Cummings! Dont think I'm fool enough to be Jealous. Of course, you have a perfect right to go with Cummings or any one else as much as yoa please only I can tell pretty wel when Im wanted and when I'm not. Why, Arthur!" said the young worn an, reproachfully. I am surprised al you. As If I was not always glad to see you!" "See here, sa'-the young man How can you say that aftei warmly. the way you absolutely shook me yes, shook me at the Smiths'? "Did you come here on purpose tc be disagreeable?" demanded the young woman. I came to see the re pictures, turned the young man. coldly. "Then why dont you go and look at them?" she asked. Tm sure don't want to detain you! Here was bo glad to see you again and then wm Colonel writer for the New Orleans for the past thirty years d, , . the ago of 65. Bandits attacked and pin., . Kazansky monastery, near 7 Russia, and secured gold Bz u I Nervel it the oddest and most striking sort SUMMARY Governor John A. Johnson nominated for governor of m by the Democrats. $200 on Clothesline. Ansonla. Conn. Two hundred dollars In bills banging on a clothesline was the sight which attracted attention in Woodbury recently. William Wilbelmy of this city drove to WoodHe was bury to visit his brother. caught In a thunderstorm, and when he reached bis brother's bis trousers were wringing wet. He borrowed another pair while the hired girl washed And When He Returned for Them Policeman Arrested a Chicago Man. Coatesvllle, Pa. NEWS u0 Copyright Sr VtiOm SMraott Mrchbisnop haa been the apostolic delegate to this country since 1902, before which time he eerved aa the popes representative In Canada. He Is an Italian by birth and entered the Francieean order In I860: he was eon. secrated bishop In 1892 and raised to the archbishopric three years later. vnvMvwnn HIS LEG IN THE LEMONADE. Wooden 8tump Used as Stirrer Got Harmon Into Trouble. New York. That a wooden leg Is not a fit and proper Instrument with which to stir a bowl of lemonade is tbe opinion of Nathan Wagner, a restaurant keeper at 215 Park Row. Wag. nor , was dozing In his restaurant, when a breathless ragamuffin rushed In from the street ' be cried, "dores a Say, mister, guy outside wat put his leg In your lemonade. Now, In front of Wagner's place Is a stand on which he placed a large glass bSwl of lemonade to be sold at tbe rate of a cent a glass. Mr. Wagner, therefore, was quick to get to the sidewalk, ,To hie astonishment, he man leaning against saw a the bench and slowly stirring the lemonade with a wooden leg, which he had unstrapped from Its stump, Stop that! yelled Wagner. The man looked surprised, lifted the leg from the bowl and then deliberately struck the glase a whack that was arraigned in the Tombs court he was minus Ms log, Police ii gave his name as James Harmon, and said that he bad no home. Why did you break the bowl asked Magistrate Kernochan yUr Honor',, Harmon can see for that I couldnt have done it. yourself I have no wooden leg. .. "!,nd7d:,a!1 Wa8nPr wrathfully. why? Because I that leg out of your band andgrabbed threw it into ildvX 1.2 fnd ideSuJt. Well, w Da8 ,,lcke'1 11 P 8 0nd ra d0Wna said the magistrate, "while the police are looking for your w months"681 Bafely n the l8'an1 six one-legge- d Women See Sea Serpent. Kalamazoo, Mlch.-F- our women and a man vouch forveracious the istence of a new kind of gea sern which they saw m Long akiTn 1 hero. U U 40 feet long, has an alll. gator head, a fihlvAFAfl 1$ red skin. Mrs. Clara Wheatley, her "Hely, cried Wagner, Just ae Policeman Williams' of the Oak Street and Alma and Ellen Arnolddaughter station came along, and tbe police- monster came up within five fL man placed under arrest tbe man who their boat, blinked at them and had awung the leg. When the man appeared when they cried out 2 VJ Russo-Amerlca- n , , 7ng r.rk lsbhSto"h5,,,, |