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Show BRYAN'S AMERICAN EAGLE. Answer to the UTAH Mrs. Lou Hamilton, in jail at Salt Lake on the charge of murdering her husband, is still in feeble health and requires the services of a physician. child aged J 8 months, daughter of John Jones, a carpenter at Murray, fell into an irrigation ditch a few yards from the house and was drowned. Charles Telford of Jiountiful has been nominated by Congressman King as cadet at the United States Military academy, with Ed. AV. Cole of Salt Lake City as alternate. The second crop of lucerne is being cnt, grain is being harvested and every thing betokens a tine year for the farm ers in Washington county,, in every respect. Nineteen Mormon missionaries left Salt Lake City last week for the east. They are destined for various fields in this country and Europe. Keageant Ham, retired, of theTwen-ty-fourtfell from a balcony on South street, from the effects of wkich hedied. Jle was intoxicated at the time of the accident. Ham had been a soldier for thirty years and bore a good record. A Sec-ou- d Arthur Brown, G. S. Holmes, John Graham. A. I). Katz, Charles Meighn, Mrs. D. D. McLaughlin, A. 11. Nash, Ralph Guthrie, Fred T. MeGur-riand John Henry Smith have been elected delegates to the National League convention of Republican clubs at Detroit July 13. f thf Cincinnati, O., Jr p,3.--Wfrait1 concerning the charges made by the People's party candidate for governor of Maine last year, Mr. Bryan said: "No conditions were attached to the money turned over to Senator Allen, except that it should be usd according to Mr. Allen's judgment f,,r the cause of bimetallism. All donatious were made for that purpose. The money was divided between Democrats, Populists and Silver Republicans in proportion to the vote cast. To ignore the Populists would have been an inexcusable slight. The subject of fusion was not discussed directly or in- Contfrnlng ex-ing- s - . - , hrst-elas- s Park, state superintendent of instruction, is closing up the contracts with the publishers for the adopted by the recent textbook convention. Each publisher who had a book adopted must enter into a contract and give bonds to furnish the books at the prices named in his bid. text-book- s Mrs. Cora Thomas, who is charged with murder in the first degree, for the killing of her husband, Samuel Thomas, a member of the Twenty-fourtinfantry band had a preliminary bearing before Justice MeMaster at Salt Lake city and was held for trial in the district court under a $3,0(0 bond, h The Washington county is being depopulated of cattle, on account of the high Ilold-l'p- Angus-Crave- n Case. San Francisco, June 23. Mrs. Cra ven spent another weary day upon tW witness stand, when the trial of the case was resumed. Between objections and arguments on the part of counsel Mrs. Craven managed to testify that her chief reason for not having produced the deeds at the time of her negotiations with the attorneys for the Fair heirs were that she was afraid that i it was known she hail them she would be robbed and perhaps murdered, as she had already lost two wills of tin late Senator Fair. Everyone owning cattle Is Belling; In fact the highest Angus-Crave- price for years is being paid. There are more buyers than cattle, and each one has been gradually the other. Some very line herds are being pushed toward Milford for shipment. n long-winde- g court-marti- d e, Rich Ore. Boise, Ida., June 23. An important developeinent has just been made in Willow Creek district. It is in a tunnel in the Eastern mine, which b owned by Col. W. H. Dewey. The tunnel has just cut a ledge at a depth o' nearly 300 feet, disclosing two and one half feet of ore, said to run 200 in gold. This is the deepest work in tin camp and is regarded as establishinp the permanency of the veins. Marshal for AWxka Appointed. e i in ' ToOrRaiw.c League Clubs In Ohio. Indiana. Wet i rjr i Cincinnati, O.. June 23. The Ohi Valley Bimetallic league met witl Kentucky and ni-.i- . present from Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia. Chairman Washington made a brief nddres; stating the object of the meeting wa to organize league clubs of the foil! Btates named for the purpose of furthering the free coinage of gold an silver. The convention listened to set address by IIou. Charles A. Tovvm delegates Kentucky i of Minnesota. principal event in the doings o the league was a meeting at the l'ikt opera house and the leading feature ol that meeting was the ovation to Hon William J. Bryan. 51r. Bryan arrived late in the after Mo,n. lie appeared at the Pike open; house after addresses hud been mad. by Senator E. A. Fiuley and Mr. Bar tine of Nevada. II is reception wa; one long protracted, deafening roar o enthusiasm. Mr. Bryan said he wa: not there to speak, but to exhort What he wanted was organization anc agitation until bimetalism triumphed. After his speech he had to go through a short season of handshaking. The Woodford's Old Speech. New York, June 23. A dispatch tt the Herald from Madrid says: "T!u avowed and tinal Cuban policy of tin I: Liberal party is now complete. thorsincere and guarantees autonomy ough, directed by u trustworthy a;i humane civilian government. The newspapers are busy looking the speech which it is alleged General Woodford made years ago, favorin the Cuban rebels and drawing inferences therefrom They also echo tin statement published in an English pa per that the Hawaiian islands wouh. be at the mercy of the Spanish fleet in the event of an international rupture The Heraldo publishes an extraordinarily violent editorial against Genera' Woodford, saying that if he is another filibuster he cannot come to "Spain and be received at court. Washington, June 23. The presi dent nominated ns Marshal of Alaskr James L. Shroupof Idaho, brother o' Senator Shroup. Mr. Shroup is a resident of Salmon City, has been foi years prominent in mercantile affair." Attempted Suicide on the Street. in the territory and state, and was re Cheyenne, Wyo., June 23. Mrs cently a candidate for appointment a Samuel Haines, a rather pretty young Governor of Alaska. woman of this place, created a sensation by attempting to commit suicide The Cabinet Plsensse Ilannll. on the street. She sent a policeman Washington, June 23. The cabinet into a saloon to look for her husband, was in session fully two hours. The and ns he returned she drank a small Hawaiian treaty was discussed at bottle of chloroform and fell to the length and it is stated as a settled fact pavement, shrieking that she killed that the administration does not now herself. Prompt medical attention entertain any expectation of gcttinc 8 saved her life, and it is believed she vote on the treaty in the senate before will recover. Domestic difficulties the December session of congress. It caused the act. is stated that Commissioner Calhoun' Saved by an Inch. report as to the condition of affairs in Cuba was not laid before the cabinet. Cripple Creek, Colo., June 23. A dynamite bomb, the fuse of which had Tta Idaho narration to burned to within an inch of the cap, Congress Appointed. was found under the house of E. R. Boise, Ida,, June 23. The povernot Jacobi, president of the defunct Minappointed the following delegate! ers' State bank. Had it been exploded to the congress: the houae would have been wrecked James Graham, R. E. McFarland, C. probably killing the family. It is II. Jackson, C. J. Bassett, Joseph II. thought to have been placed there by Hotehlnson, N. M. Ruick, C R, Shaw lome angry depositor, but there it no n J & Wc1 to the guilty party. eke Trans-Mississip- pi ! ls - . Tennesee Nashville, Tenn., June 22. A Louis ville & Nashville express train run ning between this city and Mcmphb was held up by a lone robber sit 2 o'clock nt night near St. Bethlehem. The robber, who is supposed to have boarded the train at Clarksville, entered the express car and compelled the messenger. L. C. Branden to open the sate. After rifiinir the safe tin robber pulled the bell cord and when the train slackened its speed he jump ed otr ami made his escape. Accord he received secured froir ing to'reports 82,000 to $4,0(M). Bloodhounds wen placed on the bnnd't's trail. A public e para-jjph- . Trans-Mississip- SUIT EXPECTED. r in the t ap! Oil National ( Imp ItaiiW Meal at I.iucoln, Neb. Another ate marked the consideration of the 4l schedule, which began in the ate. ;t developed, first, in a serious disablement on the Republican side of jate and led to a warm personal between Senators Carter of mtiina and Foraker of Ohio, on one nd, and Mr. Allison of Iowa in rge of the bill, on the other, )ir. Foraker asserted that an agrce-;n- t concerning rates on certain wools vs being violated and that under the (cumstances every senator would be ;e to act for himself. Hr. Allison, with great vehemence, flared that he could not be driven directly. "Mr. P.ateman, I presume, has refer threats. ence to the letter ns reproduced in my )lr. Carter, who had aroused the s book. I ook it from the newspapers. jirm, endeavored to have the If Prof. Bateman proves to me that it relating to carpet wools go was a mittake I shall make the change er, with a view to securing some tited action, but Mr. Vest, in an iron-H- i iu subsequent editions. speech, objected to delaying the John ', McCartney Acquitted, and postponing the (i of prosperity Washington, June 23. Judge Brad jhiic business while republican sena-tley sustained the motion of the de held a caucus. fense in the case of John W. McCartney Jr. Teller, of Colorado, also spoke a broker of this citv. on trial for al- aiiust took occasion to say and delay, ... i i icgeu contempt or the sugar m VVOuld never vote for the bill unless vesication committee, and ordered Ueetionahle features were eliminated. the jury to rt t ,irn a verdict of aequital. Aside from this stormy interruption. The ground of the decision was that L)t,ress was made on the wool schedthe questions asked were individual i v..,.-s rvurii niio uor I he fluty on wool was committee questions. Mr. McCartney jjjreed to at 10 cents per pound, a no was the last of the alleged recalcitrant on wool at 11 cents, which witnesses to be tried so that the record isbetween the house and senate rate? stands, acquitted six, convicted one. in each case. The rates on namely, Broker E. R. Chapman of New went over. York, who served twenty-fivday."BIMETALLIC LEAGUE, (actual) in jail. e Dr. onea. AKrnt A BIG Kates on Wool wan Being Violated. Washington, June 23. An exciting third-elus:-woo- n The cases of John Adams and others charged with gambling at Fort Dougat las, havs been tried by the post. Adams was found guilty and sentenced to serve one month in the guard-housbesides being deprived of his pay for one month. Several other men who were tried for gambling were simply fined. A gambling den was found under the band quarters, where five nionte games were running. James O'Connor and John Dolnn, whose true name is Charles Kempton, both youths, who pleaded guilty to burglary some six months ago and were then seut to t he reform school, but bell a ved themselves so badly iu that that they could not be kept there any longer, were brought before Judge Norrell at Salt Luke City for further proceeding and his honor sentenced O'Connor to eighteen months and Kempton to one year iu the state prison. St. George was thrown into excitement over a fire in the Lund block on the 17th inst., which took the united men to efforts of about seventy-fivpet it under control. The fire whs btarted in the stables of D. H. Cannon, . jr., ly little boys and firecrackers, and a high wind was blowing from the southwest, carrying the (lames toward the Lund and Andrus barns. For some time it looked as if they were doomed, but two brigades working from both ides got it under control. No damage was done to the former, while the lat- ter was scorched badly. Mr. Cannon ii the only one damaged to any extent, The Utah Press association, whoso membership includes nearly all the newspaper editors and publishers in the state, will have an outing at beau- tiful Castella Springs on July 3. Sev eral hundred dollars in money and merchandise have been donated, which will be hung up as prizes in various contests that w ill take place. Special rates will prevail and a large throng is expected to be present The associa- tion days have always been enjoyable Th"' "n Tgf second-clas- C. over-biddin- of Hrlber, yn UTAH NEWS. price being paid. t har I'ojHllUU, flLi. WU1XUJAOK. MURRAY, THE WOOL SCHEDULE. REPLY. Linceln, Nb., June 21. Nearly 100 monevet 1 men of Illinois, scattered over the state from Chicago to East St. Louis, many of whom reside at Peoria and Galesburg, have been made defendants in what is likely to prove the most sensational bank litigation ever instituted ia the west; the next chapter in the famous case in which Charles Mosher, president of the defunct Capital National bank of this chy, figured to the extent of stealing something over a million dollars. His bank closed in 1S01. Ten years prior to that time, the Capital National bad been paying big dividends, amounting in the aggregate to half a The stockholders million dollars. were mostly Illinois people. Receiver IIayden of the Mosher bank now has brought suit against these stockhold ers to force them to return the dividends paid by Mosher, on the ground that they were not earned but were paid out of the money of the depositors. He says that the books show that the bank never made a dollar. A similar suit has just been decided against a New York stockholder, H. Ward How ard, who must return $28,000 paid him by Mosher. The Situation in Havana is Appalling. Havana, June 21. Extermination in the islands is an appalling fact. The death rate is actually increasing. A prominent Spanish medical officer, who has full knowledge of the interior, says that should the war be prolonged fifteen months, the western half of the island will be entirely depopulated. The death rate is likely to double next month. Contagion will then mow the people down rapidly. The rains have turned the interior into quagmire in many places, The trocha is a pestilence ditch. The soldiers are suffer ing terribly from fever and dysentery. Little ot the smallpox vaccination is effective. Thousands of pacifteos might easily have been saved by vaccination, THE QUEEN IN LONDON. Neighbor In A of Loyalty and Delight. Demonstration rreryone Vied With London, June 22. The queen is now In London. An immense crowd gathered near Faddington station in the waited early hours of the morning and The early with stolid patience. were enlivened by the pealing ol oeus-min the morning breeze everywhere floated the royal standard. Throughout, the route was tenanted bv an immense assemblage. Everr window had its occupant, every roof every available space it its the street and square, sidewalk and fardens. the paths and chairs and even the trees and railings of the parks 1 tie w ere black with loyal humanity. her to peo gratify queen drove slowly ple. Volleys of cheers rose clearly above the constant roar of acclama tion. Hats were thrown in the air, handkerchiefs waved in welcome and everyone vied with his neighbor in active demonstration of loyalty and ho-jr- s , delight. The police were kept busy attending to faintinc- women, but the crowds - were in the best of humor and chaffed everyone. A number of Americans, armed witn kodaks, had stationed themselves op posite the palace gate, and semebody shouted: "Now, Y anks, three cneers for your mother!" raising a roar of good-humore- laughter. d Earthquake Shocks and Heavy Rains. Oaxaea, Mexico, June 22 The earth quake shocks and heavy rains have seriously interrupted telegraph com munication with the Isthmus of Tehu- an tepee during the last three days. Advices have been received here that the official commission sent to the city of Tehuantepec by President Diaz to investigate the reported formation of n volcano and the extent of the earthquake damages has arrived at its des tination and found the condition of affairs much worse than they had ex pected. The town of Tehuantepec con tained about 15,000 inhabitants, and is if taken earlier. completely destroyed, so far as houses and buildings are concerned, not one A "egro Riot. remaining standing. There were a Chattanooga, Tenn., June 21 nenry number of substantial and costly build Thomas, a negro excursionist from ings in the town. The people are liv Birmingham, fired into a party of in tents and in the open air on the Gadsden negroes just as the train was ing outskirts of the place. leaving and wounded Will Garner, a local cab man. Garner and his friends Railway Kmployees Meet. returned the fire and a general riot en Newcastle, Pa., June 22. A secret sued. Thomas was shot in the back of railand neck and was stabbed twice in the meeting of the five great orders here was held which shoulder and will die. Two other way employees was of members the attended by Birmingham negroes were shot and orders from over different all the Mean stabbed. another was whisky the country. The press committee of was the cause of the trouble. the meeting was instructed to only Willing to Tay Sirs. Ruiz 840,000. give out the resolutions passed, but it Madrid, June 21 Premier Canovasis is understood that steps were taken willing to pay the widow of Dr. Ruiz looking for a federation of the several 540,000 if the United States government orders. Resolutions were passed rewill not press an official claim. The cording the various labor organizations announcement of this fact has aroused as favoring arbitration in the settlevehement public opposition, which the ment of all differences between themMadrid press is inflaming. The news selves and their employers, and call on papers blame the government for al the Republican party to make good its lowing Dr. Ruiz to be killed, but cen campaign promises and have an arbisure it for acknowledging it. Thevsav tration law passed speedily, protesting Spain is "under the iron heels of the against further extension of time in Yankees." which railway companies shall equip their cars and engines with automatic The Views of Emperor William. brakes and favor a restriction of forLiondon, June zi. ine tans cor eign immigration. respondent of the Times reports a con Threatened by Anarchist. versation affecting to represent the London, June 22. Owing to the reviews of Emperor William, in the course of which, speaking of his anx cent explosion of bombs in Paris and iety as to the future of Europe, he the arrival in England of many forsays that he does not fear internal dis eigners known to be connected with sensions or the anarchists. Rut he anarchy, the Scotland Yard authorifears the expansion of one of the great ties have been very active. Anarchist powers and the intervention of the leaflets treating the jubilee in threatUnited States in the affairs of the Old ening terms have been issued. One of them describes the Queen's reign as "World. "sixty years of cowardly wars for gold lab Meeks Arrested. on ignorant and defenseless savages," Ida., June 21. Bob and as "an increase of the wealth of Montpeher, who was arrested by Sheriff Great Britain, but not for the mass of Meeks, Ward of Uintah county, Wyo., last working people, whose condition is week, has been fully identified by Pay worse than sixty years ago." ing Teller Mcintosh as one of the The leaflet quoted also says: "The three men engaged in the Montpelier mass of lunatics going to the bank holdup on August 13, last. Sher appalling asylums yearly have been driven mad iff Rich, of Bear Lake county is now in by the stress of the difficulties of life Evenston awaiting requisition papers. during Victoria's glorious reign." He will be tried at the next term of C'Hpt. Itoyeott Dead. District court. London, June 22. Ciipt. Boycott is fTJ Spaniards Redeeming Their Sons. dead. He whs about .15 years of age New York, June 21. A dispatch to and became famous through being the the Journal from Havana says: first man subject to "boycott" in IreMadrid dispatch says since January land. He was a land agent in 1881 in 1st last, $8,100,000 has been paid ikto the Connemara section of County the government treasury by Spanish Mayo, where he collected rents. In parents redeeming their sous from 1SS0 Mr. Parnell made a speech in military service in Cuba and the Phil which he urged the people of Ireland ippines. to abstain from agrarian crimes and to adopt instead a policy of sending harsh Japanese Coming:. San Francisco, June 21. A Japanese landlords, agents and bailiffs to "Covthe lliyie, is on her way entry," the old term for boycotting. to this port. She will receive orders Events so shaped themselves that here from the Japanese government, Capt. Boycott was the first man that and it is anticipated that she may be the Irish experimented on in this connection, hence the now familiar word, ordered to Hawaii. Man-of-AT- ar man-of-wa- r, "boycott" t |