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Show i Finding him guihy en cimrges ot misconduct in office and neglect ot duty. Governor Hughes lias ordered XEBH1 BEFOUL It. J. Helmed. NEPH l'ablislmr. the removal from llaffen, president the Bronx in New UTAH I The commissioners of Indutii war records, who have been in Salt Lake since August 1C, have practically finished their work in Salt Lake county and will now take up their work in Sanpete county. t The Utah mission of tiie Methodist Episcopal chm eh met in Sait Lake City, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, in its tlnrty-nintannual conference, about 100 ministers and lay delegates being in attendance. While set'ing up a threshing rna , chine near llolliday, William a farm r, was caught between the machine and a pst when the horses bigau backing up and so badly crushed that ihaili resulted. in OgWhile out mountain den canyon, II. 11. Mcher ot Ogden was confronted with a ic ions looking panther which showed fight from Lie start. Melver procured a receiver and succeeded in killing the le ast. While burning rubbish in the back yard at her home in Sail Lake City, Mrs. Catherine Hannan, aged tin, was probable iaially burnei, despite the frantic attempts of neighbors to sace her after her clothing had caught fire. The laj ing mu of a new towns'Ue at Axtel village in Gunnison valley, and the erection of a large hotel near the Denver & Rio Grande station, is to commence at once. The growth of this section in the past two years has been a wonderful one. Indian cattle on the Uintah reservation are said to be dying by scores from "black leg. Wholesale vaccination of the Indian Hocks is being undertaken in the face of much diffThe Indian llockniasters streniculty. uously objected at first. Taking advantage of the Pope irri gation law', passed at the last session Df the legislature, fanners of Weber and Davis counties will meet at Lagoon on the afternoon of August 31 to discuss the feasibility of forming an irrigation district under the new act. Mukuntuweap canyon, in southwestern Utah, has been set aside as a national monument by President Talt. This canyon is in the vicinity of far from any railroad, and it Is regarded as one of the most interesting samples of erosion in existWay-man- ence. Gunplay Maxwell, who was killed at Price by Deputy Sheriff Johnston, was buried in the city cemetery in Salt Lake City, on August 25th. Four carriages and the htarse formed the procession to the cemetery, and no religious services of any kind were held. C. E. Blaylock is in the Ogden hospital in a precarious condition as the result of burns, which at first were regarded as not of a serious nature, but now the physicians attending him are of the opinion that his lungs became affected from the severe burns on the chest. The regular examinations for the Rhodes scholarship to the Oxford university, England, will be held at the University of Utah, October 19 and 20. Any Utah student who is able to meet the requirements will be eligible for the examinations. An innovation in the bee industry will ne carried out by A. G. Anderson of Perron. Mr. Andeison believes that the bee has too long a vacation, and propost to take his Lives to California during the winter months and secure a honey crop and then return to Utah in the nmn.ior. E. J. Williams and liis son Guidon, ot Sait Iuike, were struck by "llahtnmg, both being rendered unconscious and temporarily paralyzed, but have fully recovered. The lightning let perfect of a nearby tree imprinted on of the father and soil. the bodi-Sheriff Wilson of Weber county believes the man Olson, in jail at Omaha, who confessed to the murder of Deputy Sheriff Clark, near Uintah,, last fall, is insane from the use of drugs, and only imagines his guilt. Olson will not he brought back for trial, but may be sent to an asylum. piiou-graph- s s : R. Several Irrigation Projects Will Reclaim Much Land in West. the registry department UTAH STATE NEWS the trial. F. oi Flanary, superimondent ei of the Dallas, Texas, puDoffice. was shot and fatally wounded by his divorced wiie iu tlie business district of tile city. Two men were Killed and a third suffered injuiies from which lie wi! die, when a boiler in the plant of the Slow Seven Mining company, at Neck City, Mo., exploded. A statement lias been issued b Rev. J. Holmes McGuiness, E. H. liar K. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, Eenator Sutherland will be a candibefore the legisladate for ture of 1911. M. E. Hall, a machine man employed in the Yankee mine at Eureka, Is in a Salt Lake hospital in a precarious condition, as the. result of a premature explosion. The Spnngville Canning company has a force of forty persons harvesting tomatoes. The prospect for the tomato crop there at present is the best in the history ot the industry. Clarence Ernest, the Ogden negro who recently shot and killed another negro, will not he placed on trial until January, illness of the prosecuting attorney causing a postponement ot office 0f Louis of the borough York. The News Happenings of Seven Days Paragraphed INTER-MOUNTAI- The town of Grand Forks. Idaho, has been to'ally destroyed by fire, a steam shoxtl engineer rained Mulhol-and- . in whose room in a lintel the fire stjvied being urned to death, and 3do people rendered homeless. I he menders of I he Salt Lake choir refused to enter in the Es'eddfod at Seattle when the managers of the affair insisted that each member of the choir pay an admission fee of 75 cents to the hall before they entered in the contest h rank L. Kaiser, a locomotive engineer, and his wile, died last Sunday at Salt Lake City as the result of eating dumplings which had been made with rough on rats instead of baking powder, Mrs. Kaiser making trie fatal she was nooning the n.miake wh-Sunday dinner. The wile ot Harry Wolf, ail Indian who was poisoned at a picnic a; the ton in Montana on JanCiow i 9, has contested that sne puiced uary in a drink served her husthe to band. and has been sentenced Her acthree years imprisonment. complice and lovt r, George Thomas, a young buck, will serve sixteen mmihs lor his part in the crime. Ruhing'T-J.iH'lio- i h ho controversy skills to have been buried at the Naa1 Seat- tional Conservation emigre e. a majority of t tie delegates anxious to ignore the controversy. and Ed. Htlian. aliened liorsetliief who broke jail at Delta, Colo., and nearly' killed Sheriff has been captured at Montieel-io- , Utah, having been Let rayed to the officers by a former pal. James J. Hill, the northwestern rail.v ay king, declares that tae northwest will harvest a wheat crop of 5o,hmj,(HIo bushels, but that those who predict a bumper crop are simpiv encouraging lie discovery of radium ore in the United States is the object of a started by Thomas E. Walsh, millionaire mine owner of Denver, who has made a preliminary donation i $5,000 to aid prospectors. The first local option election In Idaho resulted in defeat for the liquor interest, the people of Canyon county voting for local option and ultimate rohibition. Western banks and those of the Interior generally are overliowing with .money. They can get along with little aid from eastern banks. This is tne view of Acting Secretary of the 'i ri asury Norton. DOMESTIC. Five persons were killed near St. was Louis when their automobile struck by a passenger train at a crossing. Laurent Grosse, driver, and Leonard Cole, mechanician, were killed r automobile in the race at Brighton Beach. Mrs. A. Buelly, 22 years of age, was burned at her home in San Bruno. Cal., as the result of starting a fire n the kitchen stove with kerosene. Leo Kevins and Frank Smith, the two boys who stole $7,000 from the Valley bank of Santa Clara, Cal., at pistol point t have been bound over to the district court for Lrial. In full view of a large crowd, William Bedview of Cairo, 111., second baseball baseman of the team, was instantly killed by lightning at Inlet park during practice before the game with Atlantic City, N. J. The Pressed Steel Car company at Sehoenville. Pa., is being tried on a ehaige of peonage, the allegation bes are ing made that the compelled to work by the companys guards. One thousand miners in the have valley, Pennsylvania, lefused to go to work pending settlement of a complaint concerning the Use of the new explosive, carbonite, which they claim shatters Lie coal The and decreases their earnings. operators maintain they have no option. as a state law requires the use of earhonite. .. O. Miliiken, diseipanarian of Haskell institute at Lawrence, Kans., declares that the story of alleged traffic in Indian girls attending this school is absolutely untrue. Edward H. Harrimau, the railroad king, has returned from his European trip, where he went in search of health, but is still far from being a well man, although he declares the trip was of great benefit to him. I e Tab-orn.ic'- pui-o- n -s g Wil-Lam- s, 1 move-nitn- t twenty-four-hou- Cub-Gia- strike-breaker- Youg-hiocle-n- r Vf ' - y rimans person'll chaplain, in which he declares that Mr. Harriman steadily improving iu health is Dr. Walton Lampo, a Sail Eranciscc hysician, was shot and killed by his wile who accused him of beating her 1 he couple had been married but six ; korthvvest. INCREASE CROP AREA !vvliEAT Its Value More Than Double That of Fruit, But Irrigation Rapidly In- creasing Latter. district comprising the terwhere Washington, Idaho, Monritory tana and Oregon join, taking in square miles, the wheat crop for 1908 was valued at $45,000, (DO, and the fruit from the same district was estimated at $16,000,000, writes Clarence E. Edmonds in American Review of Reviews. It is predicted that wheat production in this vast territory will decline from this time on, while fruit production will increase until it overshadows cereals. What irrigation and fruit have done for the great state of Calilfcrnia they are doing fer the northwest, this being evidenced by the great rapidity ot settlement noted in Oregon and Washington, where the population has more than doubled in the last eight years. With the increase in population comes, necessarily, not only a decrease in the wheat area, but also an increase in home consumption, thus lessening the supply furnished the outside world from the In the 150,-00- 0 Millions of Acres cf Ground Will Be Added to Scope of the United States by the Assistance of Government. Crop-Producin- g projects completed and upon which the government is now at work will, when fully developed, add 3,198,000 acres of land to the area of the United States while 13 others held in abeyance until the completion of the former. will reclaim 5.279.009 acres, making a total of 6,40k, rtt'O acres reclaimed at a cost of $159,021,000. The largest of the projects in Washington are in the Yakima valley, as follows!: Sunnyside, 90,000 acres tost $1,600,000; Tieton. 30.000, cost Wapato, 120.000, cost $L5u-000. The Okanogan will water 8,000 acres at a cost of $500,000. Other projects contemplated will add 400,009 acres to tlie states crop producing Twenty-fiv- e crop-prouucin- g months. The Manitoba Crain Growers asso ciation estimates the wheat crop in I07,ooi),ont, at Canada western bushels. Because his wife reiused reconEd ciliation, iollovviiig a seuuration, area. , 32 years a lumber ward Griffin, Government projects In Idaho are at Oakland by suicide committed old, the Minedoka, 160,000 acres, costing been bad taking chloroform. They $1,000,000, and the Payetto-Roise- , married thirteen yeuis. acres, completed at a cost of of ChThree men on a farm-weThe latter covers the largest icago were killed by lightning. single tract under irrigation on the WASHINGTON. continent at the present time. Oreassistant secretary gon lias the Umatilla, IS.onO acres, Mcliarg, Ormsby of the d mart m nt of commerce and costing $1,100,000, and the Klamath, labor, has resigned and the president extending into California, 120,000 has accepted his reMenariuii. acres, costing $.!,60u,000. The projects in .Montana are the Four million dollars, appropriated $9''0,-00by congress tor the mili'iu, has been Huntley, 35,000 acres, the Sun river, 16,On0 acres, costalloted among the several slates anu l Lieutenant-Generaing $500,000, and the 'Milk river, interritories by of the staff cluding the Saint Mary, 30, duo acre, of the Weaver general eosting $1,200,000. Tlie Lower army. project. CO.t'OO acres, in Mint-'anThat leprosy is a disease that has and North Dakota, will cost $2,- in its one doctor more than fooled The 700.000. Iilackfeet will water in diagnosis was lully demonstrated in acres ulnae will also Montana, in case Washington, the Early be built the Flathead, 150, OuO acres, New to ail. after according which, York skin specialists, was not a case and Fort Peck, 75,0o0 acres. Salt river project in Arizona will of leprosy, but an unusual skin diswater 200, 0oi) acres, while the Yunna ease. in California and Arizona will care for FOREIGN. 100. 000. Other projects are the have Mexico, Floods at .Monterey, Col., 150,000 acres; Gardecaused a fearful loss ot life and den Kan., 8,000; North Platt-3- , City, hunstruction of property. Twelve and Nebraska, 110,000; Truckeo-CarsoWyo., dred people are supposed to have perXev Hondo. Carls200,000; ished, 500 bodies having been recov- bad and Rio Grande, New' , and , ered, 15,000 people are homeless, D N. 40, 001); the property damage is estimated at Belle ShoS. 0; cit-ik- 200,-00- 0 st (o.-t:r-.g 0, SO! phis. Tu se are the conditions to he in tlie empire lying on the westein coast of the United States, from British Columbia to Mexico. The conditions are changing with each year, and the day is not far distant when all of the grain raised in that ''vast territory will be consumed at home and the world will be called upon to supjly a deficiency. found to-da- -- NOTES ON SHEEP RAISING. Ten sheep will eat as much as one cow and aim to feed accord .ngly. It is all light to feud on the ground unless it is muddy and wet, when they should be led in racks; the threshed oats or coarse feed in a trough. Tlie average tanner should keep clear of fads. Grow sheep for both wool and r.nnton. Both are grown on the same carcass and both should be considered in the line of profit in their production. A sheep is no more a sheep without wool than it would be without mutton. There are 90,909.000 people in this country, but we are raising only about oO.OoO.Ooq sheep half a sheep for eaeli person yearly. We ought to be eating a whole shot p every 12 months. Then the sheep business would hum. And this can be brought about by D., 100,000; Fourche, raising good sheep and educating the $15,000,000. Wyo., 100,000, and Strawberry foreigners who are coming over at shone, Jabez. Wolff e, the English swinnimr valley, Utah, 35,000. tlie rate of a million a year to cat who started trom Dover to cross the Several millions of acres of lands them. channel to Fiance, was compelled to will also be covered in Montana, CalThe best condition in sheep producgive up after having covered thirteen ifornia, Washington, Colorado, Ari- tion cannot come until the principal miles in eight, hours. zona, Idaho, Texas, Nevada, New Mex- part of the flocks of America is to be Solemn requiem mass for repose of ico, Oklahoma, Wyoming and Oregon found on farms. The distribution should be wide and not confined to the souls of the large number ot as soon as the Cwn(ls ore available. in More than acres of officers men lands 10,000,000 one locality. and engaged Spanish the sanguinary battle with the Moors are under private plants in various where plans are now under way Garden on Every Farm. July 27, was dramatically celebrated states to put 5,000,000 acres under the ditch A good many men plow' thi ir garat Melilla, August 27. Confined in an iron cage, strapped during the next three years. If these den in the spring and hanow it, withto the back of a swaying camel, El projects are carried out the IIor.e out ever applying any kind of manure in Washington, will and leave the rest of the work to be Heaven Itoghi, the rebellious subject of the contain acountry, 600.000 acres, done by the women folks and a tract single good sultan of Morocco, who was captured watered at a cost of of The deal of heavy digging and transplant$15,000,000. was recently by imperial troops, Canadian Pacific project in the How ing of vines should be done because matched through the streets of Fez river east of Calgary, Alberta, the women are not strong enough or a strong on August 27, escorted by upon whicli work started in 1901, will else have too much house work to do. guard. cover 3,000,000 acres at a cost of But a good garden should be on every Special dispatches received here it the making farm largest and a farm of 169 acres or more single front Melilla say that the Moorish tract on the continent. should have at least an acre of garof chiefs, after further consideration rewell attended and I would advise den the communication of the sultan it to be divided in Cherries. questing them to cease their hostilitracts or size tracts to suit, Nacherries are Fine grand fruit. ties against the Spaniards, finally de- ture has never a satisfactory to be planted to each different percided to continue the war until the substitute for provided The them. extreme ennial plant, such as asparagus, berSpaniards are driven from all their measures adopted by boys, young and ries and grapes, and then as much of positions beyond Melilla. old, to satisfy the inward, inbred, in- the land to annual plants as is needed During three days fighting between tolerable craving for them, when to supply the demand of an ordinary the Spaniards and Moors, the latter temptingly displayed on some neighfarm. And don't forget a are reported to have lost 1,000 men. bors tree, attest the captivating and patch of ground in the garden for alwhile the Spaniards suffered a loss ot alluring lusciousness of fine cherries, falfa for green manuring. 350. says a w'riter in an exchange. I may There has been another violent ou- further state with safety that the asRare Exception. tbreak of cholera iu Russia, this time sumption of considerable risk in this "I rather pride myself on one thing,' at Vitebsk. There were 114 cases and respect by the young boys is strong said the young father. Although I deatfis last week. evidence of a cultivated palate and have the brightest, smartest, cutest forty-twa discriminating judgment, as well as a best youngster I ever saw, I never A Paris newspaper publisned SaDe Helie goading appetite. Kansas City Time3. statement that Princess brag about him. gan (formerly Anna Gould) was Air and Water. Curing the Hay. robbed of $9,000 during her recent as necessary an eleis the Air With dry air above and dry soil beher and husband, just at Rheims, stay was relieved ment in the soil as the water, but neath, hay will cure very fast under prince, at the same time of $10,000. The robbers have not both must be there in proper quanti- the hot sun. Cut in the forenoon, it ties. If there is too much air and will be ready to put up in the afterbeen apprehended. too little moisture nitrification ceases. noon. If the hay is not very heavy Rotterat out Cholera has broken If there is too much moisture and too and if the air and soil are it is dam, there having been lour deaths little air the effect is the same. From best to rake in windrows an dry afthour L It cases. out of nine suspected ton years experience and observation er mowing and allow it to cure slowly was disease the the beliet that we have concluded that a certain there. Leave some of the natural brought from St. Petersburg. action must be practically moisture in the hay to give it taste chemical A special from Mateahaula, Mexico, continuous in the soil during the and flavor. Hay too ripe and too dry says that fifteen miners were killed growing season if we are to grow the is not only tasteless, but is less diand thirtv entombed by the dropping largest crops. This chemical action gestible than when it is put up greenof a cage into the La Paz mine. The is unquestionably dependent upon er with some of the natural sap in It. cable parted and the men dropped just a certain ideal or perfect condi1,500 feet. tion of the soil a physical condition Let Autos Drag Roads. An autoist in Missouri suggests that General Mariana, the Spanish com- that will carry In the soil just the mander, is now planning to assume deal quantity of both air and water the owners of automobiles be given and then as soon as the soil be- the privilege of dragging the roads. the offensive against the Moors, and attack determined a make comes to sufficiently warm natures work Surely wo farmers would not object expects to this. It is a good idea, for most within teii days. begins. any automobile can pull a log drag The foreign office has leased the as a as well as a team and they can do the Goes That Russia, at Odessa, villa Delstein Spider Fishing. There has recently been discovered work so much quicker. This is a good residence for the deposed shah of in Buenos Ayres a spider which prac- suggestion for the and Persia. steamer tices fishing at times. In shallow we hope there will be a law before of the missionary loss The Hiram Bingham and the death of her places it spins between stones a two- long providing for the dragging ot master. Captain Alfred C. Walkup, is winged comical net, on which it runs roads by automobile power. Let them and captures small fish, get busy in a good cause. America reported in a cablegram from Sydney, In the water, N. S. W. tadpoles, etc. Agriculturist Y'el-towsto- a 57,-00- 0 Mc-x.- 45,-00- Bnford-Trenton- one-tent- h 160-aer- e o law-make- |