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Show .. O J. 4 t-. - - . i Utah. V mil: Ela'cl d'-htherU has m Us p rt t -ice ia I.e: i i 1 t -j ) ,.n. c i Mr.-.. lury Avnht. tstc-s Anuers.-n, the eipbl-year-old grandson ot Mrs. . AVriBht, died fro-T te oread c1' f?e, f 1 now tw, youii women, aubmr f Mrs. Wright are stricken. As yet no other cases have broken out. PROVO: John Dubois of Santaquln and Frank Smith, a transient, were brought to l"rovo from Spanish Fork last evening even-ing by Sheriff Harmon to stand trial In the Fourth District court on the charge of grand larceny. The men were arrested arrest-ed by the City Marshal of Spanish Fork yesterday afternoon and were bound over In the sum of $jou each. - SPRING VILLE: Bprlngvllla is to have another new, schoolhouse that will cost between $tX)0l and tTwO.- At the special election held yesterday to vote on the levying of a 7'.-mill tax to build the schoolhouse the vote stood 1G3 for and 85 against the tax. The building will be built this season. . j ' EUREKA! Phil, -eeven-year-old son of 1 William Mathes of Eureka, superintendent superintend-ent of' the May Day mine, coasted rapidly rap-idly down a steep hill, into an electric j light pole on Leadviilo row, shortly af- ter dark last night. The lad was lying face downward on the sled and struck the pole with, terrino force with his head. He was carried home. In an: unconscious, condition,- -tut afterward revived, and the physicians believe that he ia out of danger. dan-ger. . , r . ... j MANTI: Tho case of John Edmunds of Wales, 'charged with grand larceny, j was completed in the District court In Mantl yesterday. The jury found him guilty, lia will be sentenced on February Febru-ary 2nd. - . . I TOOELE CITY: ' In the case of the I State of .Utah vs. J. S. Taylor. Ed Lem- j on, J. D. Holder and A. Donaldson, whose preliminary examination was held in Tooele yesterday, the three last named defendants were held under i"0 bonds each to appear before- the District court. Taylor was released. The charge against these men is "riot," it being alleged that they used violence to prevent assessment work being done on some mining claims. LOGAN: Wordjcomes from Hyde Park of a serious case of poisoning at that place, as a result of which Erastus Lamb and his family came very close to death. Shortly after Supper they were seized with convulsions, but the prompt action of friends in administering antidotes prooaoiy saved them. EUREKA: At a special meeting of the" City Council held last night it was decided to forbid ail dances and social parties, on account of the prevalence of smallpox in ' some of the valley towns which employ the same musicians that play in Eureka. Mayor Gear will issue a proclamation to that effect this afternoon. after-noon. . . . HEBER CITY: A snowslide in Provo canyon near Heber City Thursday morning morn-ing delayed traffic seven hours.1 The slide occurred soon after the train went out, and the snow was piled twenty-five feet deep on the track for a distance of sixty-five sixty-five feet. A party was sent out- from Provo to clear away the drift, and the train due at 8:15 reached Heber at 3 o'clock this morning, leaving for the return re-turn trip on schedule time. LOGAN: Marriage licenses were issued yesterday as follows: Henry H. Bunee, Jr., and Dora Gordon, both of Logan; Edward Duflin and Margaret Rich, both of Paris, Ida,; Lewis J. Hetty of Richmond Rich-mond and Sarah Reese of (Benson; Daniel Dan-iel Harris and Carrie Larsen of Gentile Valley, Sidney M. Dopp and Lydia Ann Bowden of Lewiston. COALVILLE: The funeral services over the remains of John J. Bowen, who died In the hospital at Salt r Lake last Wednesday, were- held yesterday afternoon after-noon from the stake Tabernacle, and were very largely attended. The speakers were Elders Edmund Eldredge, W, W. Cluff, M. W. Taylor snd T. I ' Allen. The music was furnished by the stake choir. The remains were interred in the Hovtsville cemetery. Jdaho. BOISEJ: The message of Gov. Morrison was . adopted by both houses yesterday and they also recommended a memorial to Congress for an appropriation lor the survey of the Idaho-Montana line. BOISE: .The Boise-Payette Power company com-pany management Is dally expecting to hear of the successful installation of the last piece of machinery in its new power plant at Horseshoe Bend on the Payette river, twenty-one miles from Boise. Work has been -pushed upon this mammoth enterprise en-terprise for more than a year and when completed it will represent an expenditure approximating $400,000. BOISE: In the House yesterday. Senate Sen-ate concurrent resolution No. 1, by Evans of Oneida, providing that the Senate Committee on Finance and the House Committee on Appropriations Jointly prepare pre-pare a general appropriation bill for the support of the State departments, was read and adopted unanimously. POCATELLO: Robert E. Healey was f athered in by the police last night as an nsane person. He was out in front of the Pocatello house on his hands and knees and barking like a dog. Healey's father live in Laramie, Wyo., and will be notified. Healey is a young man, about 24 years of age, and is said to have been discharged from the asylum at Evanston about a month ago. Nevada. RENO: George Schaffer, the well-known well-known Truckee lumberman, who has been ill with pneumonia for the past ten day 8, succumbed to the ravages of the disease yesterday morning at his home one mile east of Reno, surrounded by his family. TONOPAH: The once famous Silver Peak mining district int Esmeralda county, coun-ty, Nev., southeast of .'the Tonopah district, dis-trict, is another field that Is experiencing a revival and giving promise of awakening, awaken-ing, to another period of production after a long sleep. VIRGINIA CITT: Twenty-five Corn-stock Corn-stock sportsmen held a meeting last night and effected a permanent organization under the name of the Virginia Gun club. The following officers were elected: President. Pres-ident. H. J. Klnkead; secretary, W. Y. Gibson; treasurer, John Legate. Wyoming. CHEYENNE: Reports reach Cheyenne that the bones""of a monster mastodon have been found in the mountains about 100 miles north of Cheyenne. The discovery dis-covery is said to have been made by a party of hunters who took refuge in a natural cave during a severe storm. |