OCR Text |
Show f Ihev he go STANDING A WHOM, Proprietors. OF HAGGARDS RESEMBLES ONE STORIES. ,.,$1.25 ... ... . .85 Tribe of Fxe1nlv Cancitflians Who Dwell in Coontrj Rich in Vegetable and Mineral Wealth, but Who Reoeat Intrusion of the Strenuous Civilization of the Outside. iTANDIKG, B4Uor. liatnetlm to Correepoadeat. Items ef mw are aolloited from all pans of ths SQTintnr Writs spoa ses side sf ths papsr only . Writs propsr semes stalely. ImIs erder te pro tost ths PuSlisbsr from tbs full post tieas from Irresponsible psrsoss, skeuld hs !f ned smh sf ths sathor Ths iSssttty si oorrsspssAssts srllt hs withheld whenever desired. toelloom-manioetlo- ss Lieut. L. A. De Clairmont, United Mates army, late of the Philippine scouts, who has returned from Manila, tells of the existence in the interior of Mindoro island of a perfectly white race, partly Christianized, but cruelly hostile in their discouragement of communication with the onter world. The favored few who have been permitted to penetrate the fastnesses of these exclusive Caucasians tell of a country rich in vegetable and mineral wealth, and of a people skilled in the various domestic crafts, orderly, gen. tie and hospitable, but well enough satisfied with the little world to resent the intrusion of the strenuous civilization of the outside. Lieutenant De Clairmont was stationed at Pagbilao, Taijabas province, Mindoro island, and the story of the white people told him by one Manuel Castro, a native of high standing, was corroborated by the local priest and Here the presidente of the province. we have one in Mindoro, he said, race that is perfectly white. They are located in the interior, having as their headquarters a city of more than 20,000 inhabitants. There are many more of them scattered throughout the country surrounding their capital. According to Castro the existence of these white folk was discovered twenty-five years ago by a Spanish surgeon who took two of the white children to Europe. One of them he adopted and This one reeducated as a lawyer. turned to the islands and afterward wrote to the Spanish surgeon. He bad found his parents, and had decided to cast his lot with them and their people. They were Mohammedans, he said, and he proposed to devote his life to introduce the Christian religion and in other ways to give the people from whom he had been kidnaped the benefit of his knowledge. The young lawyer, it is said, is the ruling sultan of tbit isolated people. semi-civilize- d, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. UTAH STATE NEWS. The prediction is made by J. T. Jone that in ten years Utah will be the banner iron state. An effort is being made to prevent er fight from taking place in Salt Lake City. , There is again talk of extending the street car line running from Salt Lake to Murray on to Sandy. During the month of July, Utah mining companies have declared dividends aggregating $287,000. An enterprising Salt Lake saloon man has introduced the game of ping pong in his place of business. Millard county was the first in the State this year to select delegates to the Republican state convention. Smallpox has been stamped out all over Uintah county, and at present there is no quarantine at any point. The daughter of R. N. Gray of Salt Lake fell into a tub of hot water and was so badly scalded that her recovery is doubtful. Lewis Garff, one of Lehi's most prom. Inent citizens, is dead from heart fail-orsuperinduced by being overcome by the heat while working in the sun. A case of smallpox is reported from Ephraim. The case is reported to be very mild and every precaution has been taken to prevent the spread of the disease. The amount paid out as bounties on grasshoppers in Sanpete county will peach about $4,000, while it is figured this expenditure has saved crops worth over $100,000. Pioneer day was duly celebrated at the state prison, when a minstrel performance was presented by some of the convicts for the edification of their fellow prisoners. Charles Ready, a Salt Lake City ear penter, was struck on the head by a falling brick while at work one day last week and received injuries which may prove fatal. The saloon men of Salt Lake are said to be organizing for the purpose of forcing the authorities to stop hotels, clubs and drug stores from dispensing liquor on Sundays. The Socialists of the state, at a meet-Inheld in Salt Lake City last week, placed a state ticket in the field. There were thirteen delegates in attendance, representing six counties. G. Yuma, a Japanese, while engaged In cleaning windows in a building in Galt Lake City, fell from the second Btory to the pavement below, receiving injuries which may prove fatal. J. Floyd Hamilton, who shot and killed Robert Brown in a Salt Lake employment agency, has been released from custody, the testimony showing the shootiDg was in self defense. The people of Santaquin made a great laughter upon the grasshoppers last week when about 500 bushels of the pests were captured, one man bagging bushels in one days work. twenty-fiv- e The supreme court has decided that Annie Armitage Hilton was the legal wife of the late Dr. John R. Park, and, being now his widow, is entitled to d of his estate. and will receive Ann Stanley of Salt Lake, while going to the door to answer a rap, tumbled and fell, her head atrinking against the corner of a dresser, inflicting a wound which will probably prove Root-Gardn- four-year-ol- d e, one-thir- fatal. f MADE THAT DISCOVERY Eatered at tbs Postofflee st Brlhxm City ss second-clas- s mail matter. the i WHITE RACE IN MINDORO. tctV5 Tones of ebseriplloat On Tesr, i sdrsnoe.. 61 Lon tbs Three Huiith 1TKN r Aa the result of an overdose of wood alcohol, which waa taken accidentally Inatead of whisky, Mrs. Sopha Hillman died at the Brighton hotel at Brighton, where she had been employed as laundress. jf Charles Short, a discharged veteran sf the Philippine war, woundup a protracted spree in Salt Lake laat week by attempting suicide, taking an overdose of morphine, bat his life was saved by narrow margin. State Coal Mine Inspector Thomas declares that many lives could have mine if been saved at the Daly-We- st some one who understood mine ventilation had been on the scene at the time of the accident. It is estimated that 45,000,000 pounds of sugar will be manufactured by the six factories in Utah this year. Last year 32,000,000 pounds was the total output of the state, 60 that an increase of fully 40 per cent is anticipated over last year's product. The directors of the Consolidated Mercur company, whose property is located at Mercur, last week posted the regular monthly dividend of $30,-00- 0, or 3 cents a share, and reported the mines to be in better condition than ever before. Fire early Sunday morning destroyed the entire upper works of the Honerine mine at Stockton. The fire began at midnight and raged for more than two boars before it burned itself out. The origin of the fire is unknown. Loss bout $75,000, fully Insured, . N. P. Matson, a miner employed In ihe Shower mine at Diamond, had a narrow escape from death last week when a rock fell upon him, crushing several ribs and otherwise injuring him, he being rescued by comrades In time to prevent suffocation. CALIFORNIAN IMITATES TRACY. Ran Amock and Shot Five Men, Aftei Which lie Took to Mountains. In Portersville, Cal., James McKin- ney ran amuck and initiated his proceedings by shooting out the lights of a saloon, and tried to ehoot the cards out of the hands of a man in a card game. That he ODiy wounded the man was due 'to his poor marksmanship, and not to his criminal intentions. Ho then proceeded to a livery stable and demanded a rig. As bis argument wat backed by a the rig waa soon forthcoming. A constable, a deputy, and several citizens attempted to arrest McKinney, but he opened up on them, and four of them were more oi less seriously woimded. The criminal then proceeded on his way. Officers in surrounding counties were notified, and a sharp outlook is being kept. McKinney has a bad record, having, some years ago, been sent to state's prison from Tulare county, Before leaving town, McKinney called to a friendf Ive got into a hell of a fight. They came after me, but I whipped them all. I killed three or four of them. I'll die game. Yon talk about Tracy; he wont be in it with me." z' ' RIOT AT ELECTION. Od6 Man Rilled and Several Others Severely Injured. The primary election for delegates to the Republican convention of the First congressional district of New Jersey was held Monday in Camden Gloucester and Salem counties, which comprise the district. The contest has been one of the most bitter ever held southern New Jersey The polls were open from 5 to 8 p. m.t and the three hours were marked with serious fightOne man was killed in Camden, ing and Joe Goddard, the n heavy-weigpugilist of Philadelphia, was probably fatally shot while elec tioneering in Pensanken township. Another roan was dangerously stabbed in Camden, and a fourth man received stab wounds at Dog Corner," near Merchantsville. well-know- ht Killed the Widows Goats. Twelve masked men last Sunday night visited the branch ranch of Mrs. Nancy Irving, the Angora sheep breeder, located twelve miles southwest Grand Junction, Colo., and with guns, clubs and knives deliberately killed 500 Angora does and a large number of kids. The herder who was in charge of the sheep was covered with guns the perpetrators of the crime, bound and gagged and then tied to a post. There had been objections made ta goats grazing on the mesa. Big Verdict for Libel. William B. Fenton, crown solicitor of the county of Sligo, Ireland, has obtained a verdict of 3,500 damages against Patrick A. McHugh, notional 1st member of the house of commons for the northern division of Leitrim, for libel. Mr. Fentons case was that certain speeches delivered by Mr. 1 Hugh and certain articles published in his newspaper, the Sligo Champion, had resulted in his dismissal from the position of solicitor to the Sligo county council. A Wireless Telephone. Ernest Ruhmer of Berlin, an electrical inventor, succeeded Saturday evening in telephoning seven kilometres by his wireless method. The speaking voice was perfectly audible continuously during the experiment. Buhmer, who hiterto has used a searchlight thirty-fiv- e centimetres in diameter, intends to construct another between 100 and 200 centimetres, expecting to apeak forty kilometres, which would be a distance sufficient to over a modern city. f Anthracite Operators Are Likely to Make the Attempt During the Present Week. The beginning of the eleventh week of the anthracite miners strike finds apparently no change inithe situation, althongb the rumor has been revived that an effort will be made some day this week upon the part of one of the large companies to start one of their collieries. The companies have a sufficient number of coal and iron policemen enlisted now to prevent trouble, should it arise, and all that would be necessary to get a mine in operation would be a sufficient number of miners and laborers to blast the coal and load it on the cars. No doubt plenty of ordinary laborers could be secured, bat it is a question whether a sufficient number of miners could be persuaded to go into the workings. At strike headquarters the belief is as strong as ever that the operators cannot resume, and that it is idle talk Presito even suggest such a thing. dent Mitchell implicitly says that the situation is about the same, and that the strikers are as firm as ever. Notice Served on Government Tliet Inland. Claim Mari-ua BATTLE WITH FITZSIMMONS LASTED EIGHT KILLED IN PHILIPPINES. JAPANESE CLAIM l&LAND. JEFFRIES STILL CHAMPION. MAY START COLLIERIES. JP Casualties to I nlted Slate Army During Tbre Year Hostilities. adjutant-genera- ls Major James Parker of the stadepartment has compiled in insurrection the tistics regarding enwere 2,156 There the Philippines. more or gagements with the enemy, 4, 1899, between February less serious, the date of the battle of Manila, and virtual April 30, 1902, fixed as the The downfall of the insurrection. atwere larger portion of these fightsAmerican on the ambush from tacks troops, or skirmishes in which only small detachments tool? part. The number of troops that have been transported to the Philippines and have arrived there np to July 16 last was The 4,135 officers and 123,803 men. from taken monthly average strength, returns for the period of the insurrection, was approximately 40,000. casuMajor Parker summarizes the alties of the American army as follows: Killed or died of wounds, 69 officers and 936 enlisted men; deaths from disease, 47 officers and 2,535 enlisted men; drowned, 6 officers and 257 enlisted men; suicide, 10 officers and 72 enlisted men; murdered, 1 officer and 91 enlisted men; total deaths, 139 officers and 4,015 enlisted men; wounded, 19 officers and 2,707 enlisted men, a total of 2,897 killed and wounded and deaths other than by disease, 282 officers and 4,188 enlisted men; total, 4.470. A large portion of the deaths by acdrowning occurred in action or in tive operations against the enemy. Major Parker makes the percentage of killed and wounded to the strength of NORTHWEST NOTft Homer Zimmerman killed by a stroke of week near Billings, Mont Mrs. Edna Hall has been arrest Billings, Mont., charged with kid ping a younger sister from Pari, The Japanese government has served notice on the slate department that it Marcus island, toLooked as Though the CorntHlunan Mad claims possession of ward which is dow heading an AmeriAll the Meat of the Fight, tt hen Two Lucky Punches Ended can expedition under Captain Rosehill Judge W. A. Massey of Reno, x the Battle. jjegotia with a purpose ot exhausting its guano has resigned his position as mend,' as famou it extremely cleposits. Regarding the supreme court for Nevada auj American After fighting fiercely for eight desirable that no collision occur, the resume the practice of law, since the measures rounds, Robert Fitzsimmons was state department has taken the U knocked to the floor by James Jeffries to advise Captain Rosehill that he must Larry Cronin, superintendent 0( , pr The and counted out, after he had so badly offer no resistance if he should fall in Camy Bird mine at Ouray, Cola, t 000. 120 feet down a manhole, punished the champion that it looked with a Japanese warship which is also If I kl ss if the Cornishman must win. Bleed- speeding for the island. injuries which proved fatal. Vas rece Rosehill landed on this island about The Consolidated Mining eom ing from a number of gashes in the office at He put up a sign face, apparently weakening and clear' thirteen years ago. will put $750,000 into a mill, cv he exam While he ly unable to cope with Fitzsimmons and deposited a bottle setting forth his plant, water works and electrie collector a erected two to the delivered claims mines. Jeffries its at island, flagpole superior skill, Tonopah, Nev., I Europe iucky punches as Fitzsimmons paused and hoisted the United States flag. who so James O'Toole, o mysterious chaser in his fighting to speak to him, and Then he sailed away from the island, disappeared from Butte and who its, of art. turned the tide. leaving it unoccupied, a fact which thought had been murdered, has is, The H The battle was brief but noteworthy may vitiate bis title. Ideated. He had enlisted in th United Of these facts he informed the state snd will live in pugilistic history. United States District Judge Tho& It was bi Fitzsimmons tried once to arise from department, but he neglected for many of the P. Hawley, of Carsoo, has annotn the mat but sank down again in help- years to file in the treasury departSons of United for States seat, his candidacy lessness and heard himself counted ment the bond required by the guano was bra Nevada to succeed Senator Jot, from man lin out, where but a moment before be had island laws. In fact this bond was As the result of a shooting affrsj. Meanwithin the last filed It. of all the better year. plain pil only apparently Fall Creek, Ore., Henry Hoover and j The I I will never fight again," said the while, finding a deserted island, some MANY FATAL ACCIDENTS. 4 were killed by a saloon ketj, Loucks rarest battle-scarre- d take to and landed the of veteran began ring Japanese who niondclaims named McDonald, Interstate Commerce Commission Issnes when he had he sis sufficiently recovered to away the guano. There are believed cushion Interesting Bulletin. in self defense, The fight was won fairly and to be two score of them now on the talk. The interstate commerce commission to the phire h William Hunter of Sheridan, Wj( best man belongs the laurels." island, and the Japanese government facets. and has issued a bulletin on collisions has confessed to forging the named man holds that their title is good. Yon are the most history derailments of trains and casualities alive, said Jeffries in dangerous and I The Japanese warship carried the prominent ranchman of that vicin shrouds return, to persons for the three monthsending consider and for will Rosecheck $30, to a serve size an myself lucky to have won message from his government to March 31, 1902. term in the penitentiary. him to offer no resist1838, hi when I did. hill, advising According to this showing, the numlieve tt a brakeman on 4 Fitzsimmons had been fighting at a ance, and as it will probably reach William Webb, the army 9.7. ber of persons killed in train accidents furious Northern Pacific, was struck hj gait, cool and deliberate, and Marcus island, distant only 1,000 miles was 212, and injured, 2,111. All acciCAUSED CHILDRENS DEATH. to pieces with from from Yokohama, before the Rosethe chopping train at Ivanasket, Wash., and fau champion &J dents of other kinds, including, those the terrific Hono4 schooner sailed which from have hill that and lefts rights the In injured. He was taken to. St. Jos, Verdict of Spokane Coroners Jury sustained by employees while at work believed is miles him was the made it famous. 2,000 llis It distant, Graham Case. draught lulu, and by passengers in getting on or off parentsresi hospital in Tacoma, the cars bring the total number up to horse and the racer from the tap of that there will he no clash between of the corner's jury at Roseburg, Oregon. verdict the By 813 killed and 9,958 injured. the gong. the schooner's passengers and the Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Graham of Spokane, I Mrs. Henry A. Smith of Alb During this period there were 1,220 FitzWhen came men the Japanese coolies now on the island. together Wash., caused the death of their three leaped from the railroad bridge Its collisions and 838 derailments, of which derail- simmons appeared rather worried, but 221 collisions and eighty-fo- ur children by criminal neglect. The in- the Willamette river at Portland n CREMATED ALIVE. ments affected passenger trains, result- on the opening of the first round he quest resulted in a verdict That death was drowned. Her body was found! fatal accidents to assumed an air of absolute confidence Seven ing in forty-on- e People Burned to Death In a Wreck was caused by diphtheria and that the the engineer of the bridge, floats In a dam826 The and passengers injured. on the Near Xenia, Ohio. and fought with the deliberation of Note and his Graham the of wife, one and to piers. parents, George cars, eugiues railway by age against tl The Panhandle Limited train from Bose Graham, are To these accidents amounted to $1,914,258. the general that he is. of one W. guilty of criminal theoldeatir, Stahl, James As early as the second round Fitz- St. Louis, eastbound for New York, or to for employ negligence failing tiers of northern Montaua, commitk Dies at the Age of 130 To simmons had Jefferies bleeding pro- was wrecked at Trebins station, a way accept skilled medical assistance. suicide by shooting himself with of a native Mam lAu India, Mari, Aupi fusely from mouth and nose. Again atop a short distance from Xenia. Ena recommended also that The jury rifle. His head was completely blot Swell! who has resided in San Francisco as and again he landed on his bulky opClark was of Xenia imprisoned state law he passed covering such off. He was blind, and ill health gineer fhr back as the memory of the white ponent, away in such a clever under his engine and burned to a crisp. offiense and fixing a penalty. Mr. and getting Wit to have affected his mind. man rims, is dead at the age of 130 manner that it brought down the great His fireman of Cincinnati, name un- Mrs. Graham are members of the supposed roof Mondell Mam most a Mari had Wyomi? years. Aupi Congressman house with cheers. It seemed that known, was terribly mutilated, his society known as the Church of God" was a royal welcome by the tit mantic career. According to the story Jeffries could scarcely weather out the head being crushed, his given arm in not and do believe right medicine, though of bis life, told several years before zens of Newcastle on his return too broken ani both legs cut off. Seven 6urgery is permitted. When the chilgale. his mind became clouded, he was the Then the eighth round came and af- passengers were burned to death in a dren became sick they were anointed last week, cannon being fired, wbiik son of an Indian prince and was kidelder of the church. Later a blown, while two brass bands escort ter a series of hot exchanges Fitzsim- Pullman sleeper, and fifteen others by an was called and was allowed to doctor naped when he was a child and taken from the depot tot to the Hawaiian islands. There he mons paused with his guard down and were injured. lance the childrens throats, but not to the congressman Chihome. a a lived for some years, slave to Three died and spoke to the champion. The latters Train No. 2 was flying eastward at give them nese planter, and finally came to Calone recovered. Whether the parents consisted of two terrific blows limited speed when the reply Amy Stewart, a widow residing struck engine ifornia a6 a fugitive. From a Malay on will be prosecuted has not been deto him back the was burned to death ink that fleeting Leadville, a brought loaded coal car which had escaped termined. a sailing vessel be learned that bis home one night last week. A father and brothers had wasted years championship and forever removed the from the siding in Xenia and had run in trying to trace him, and had finally veteran Fitzsimmons from the fistic down MADE A RICH HAUL. exploded while the woman was into grade to the danger point. The met their deaths in resistance to Brit- arena. and the building burned so rapidly tk struck at it a full engine going speed Train Robbers Secure a Big Sum ish rule in their own country. Fitzsimmons took his defeat with and was turned over, with neighbors were unable to resene ta Mexican Central Express. Engineer woman. amazing good cheer. He walked to Clark underneath. The postal car, VENEZUELANS DEFEATED. A daring hold-u- p took place on the unfortunate the center of the ring and raising his combination car and day coach, ima ranchman liiiq W. A. Bristol, Mexican Central, Wednesday morning, Government Troop Rooted end Ammuhand addressed the multitude, saying: was the near behind, pelled severely injured i sleepers by heavy Cheyenne, after the train left Bernijillo. At nition Ceptured. just The best man has won. Had I beaten piled over the engine. Two Pullmans Beroijillo three Americans boarded the a runaway accidentlast week, histtu The Venezuelan revolutionary genJeffries tonight I should have conceded followed and were laid across the on a downlJ train, two secreting themselves on the getting away from him eral, LuciaDO Mendoza, learning that him the championship and forever reat track right angles. blind baggage and the other enteriog grade, the wagon being overturns President Castro was receiving rein- tired from the I retire just the in! ring. A gas tank under one of the cars exthe third class coach. As soon as the Mr. Bristol sustaining a broken S forcements from Trujillo, state of Los lame now but without having accom-plis- hd ploded, setting fire to the wreck, and internal and injuries. out train two the Andes, awaited near Alto de la Palma pulled riding on the I am satisfied. my ambition. the postal car, the coaches and two blind baggage entered the a body of these reinforcements, 1,000 Part of the Union Pacific park stita express car The tickel sales for the fight aggreIt Cries for and covered the sleepers were destroyed. strong, under command of Leopoldo gated $35,OOo. messenger with their depot at Rock Springs, Wyo., droppt, could be heard coming from one fesis is help it and week An reand ordered last him from to his throw Baptista. guns, engagement ensued, sight up of the Pullmans, and the helpless TOWN FLOODED. bands. The messenger offered no re the depot and freight house may folkri sulting in the defeat of the reinforcements by Mendoza's troops .and the were compelled to see two listance. The park and buildings are situate The Western Part of Irwin Inundated capture of their ammunition. women and one man burned to death The an abandoned mine, the cavings over then robbers went forces of Baptista were driven back to leisurely Breaking of .Dams. before their eyes, unable to lend Carache, seat of Los Andes. Not a manufacturing establishment aid on account of the fierceness of any through the safe, securing $50,000 in which is causing the trouble. the turrency consigned to the Banco Min-e- ro In Irwin, Pa., is running as & result of Shipments of Wyoming cattle to ft! Vendetta In Kentucky, at Chihuahua. They also took flames. market will not commence W eastern what other money packages were in The petition of Tom Cock rill, charged Friday nights storm. The breaking Solomons and safe the 20, a month and ihL fore Found. stood of two the dams flooded until the Temple the September entire quietly by with killing Ben Hargis at Jackson, neared a station, making: a hasty later than last year, owing to tbefifi train HolNeues The Wiener western of and Coal Irwin at part for says Tageblatt Ky., asking change of venue to any exit and dropping off the train as it e other county than Breathitt, except low houses, bridges and railroad sid- that Dr, Zellia, a professor at the was slowing down, made their escape. that the range is in such excellent fa he can the dition cattle kept that were Vienna washed who The is ings away. university, Knott and Lee, makes the extraordibig exploring better pries owners await while the TRACY AGAIN HEARD FROM. nary statement that Breathitt and ths Westmoreland car shops were damaged Palestine in behalf of the Imperial other counties named are so complete- thousands of dollars. In the country, Academy of Sciences, has discovered Declares He Has Business The supreme court of Montea to Settle With coal shafts are flooded and dozthe walls and gateway of the ancient ly under control of his enemies, who many an injunction applied fort; Merrill Brothers Before ens of bridges destroyed. granted The hail Leaving are stated to be influential and wealthy, ent all the oats and corn to the ground temple of Solomon in the neighbor Miles Finlen of his successors in k Country. that he would be certain to be ad- and all vegetation is destroyed. hood of Janohaha, in Samaria. terest, the Amalgamated Copper eot According to a dispatch from Tajudged guilty. The plea contains s Near Washington the creek overflowed Strike Leader Pleads Guilty to Contempt ot coma: Tracy, the outlaw, appeared at pany, to prevent F. A. Heinzs fra! and the passenger train bound for bitter arraignment of the Hargisses. Conrt Charges. Millers logging camp, four miles from operating the Minnie Healy minepi Waynesburg, with 100 passengers, wat At Parkersburg, W. Va., John L. Kansaskat, Wash, Wednesday, and ing determination of appeals Ira. The Wyoming Tie King Retires From held np nearly all night. I Business. Gehr of Colorado, an organizer of the ate dinner. When asked why he did Judge Harneys noted decision. PERFORATED WITH BULLETS. United Mine Workers of America, not take advantage of the lull and J. C. Teller, the tie king, has sold Mrs. D. M. Durfee, wife of Jafp his business in Southern Wyoming to Woman Lives Eighteen Honrs With Bullet pleaded guilty to contempt of court escape from Green River valley, Tracy Durfee, of Phillipsbnrg, Mont.,!, after his case had been pending all day aaid: Wound Through Heart. the Carbon Timber company. The shot, it is thought fatal!) mysteriously I have some business to settle with last deal inclndes tools, camps, unexpired An investigation by the Coroner intc and many witnesses had testified on week, Mrs. Durfee had bees contracts with the Union Pacific and the death of Mrs. Cecilia M. Sullivan his speeches of contempt. Gehr is the Merrills brother. I understand that see her dressmaker and was oah( Teller's bond not to engage in business of Baltimore, from bullet wounds, only person at Parkersbnrg now the brother wants to see me. home when ahe waa hit by ah, way in competition with the purchasers Tracy ia not wounded and looks is shows that she lived eighteen charged with contempt, the eleven thought to have been a stray bulk! cases which were pending against fresh and rested. He ia wearing a The new company has secured a large honrs, with one bullet wound other through Little hope is entertained for her Eh tract of timber near the head of the the heart, another that penetrated the alleged yiolatorsof the courts injunc- derby hat, and had a slouch hat in h!a He still has his Winchester pockeL The official vote for governor at IK Encampment river and expects to have stomach, liver and apleen, and ona that tion being released on their own re- and two revolvers and has a good supelection in Oregon shown recent 300 men at work inside of the next cognizances. grazed her heart. ply of ammunition. following result: Chamberlain (De. thirty days. Bacc War In West Virginia, TOO MUCH HANDSHAKING. Fighting Ship Trust. crat), 41,857; Furnish (Republican) Ikj Two Killed and Several Injured as Result Two negroes whose names are un581; Hunsaker(Pro.), 3483; Ryan (Sock!. Tha announcement from Montreal of Explosion. were Prominent known Iowa at Mason Loses lynched Womeladolf, 3771, Chamberlains plurality, 27$. Two men were killed and two others that the Canadian Pacific railway had, Hand. W. Va., by an angry mob numbering S. Dean, Republican candidate the at of the Canadian minis request seriously burned by an explosion ol J. N. McClanahan, a prominent poli- supreme judge, received a plurality 4, several hundred. The first victim waa now in ters offered to estabLondon, in one of Bois San the Coal comgas shot and killed in the station house; tician of Corydon and Master 17,146, the largeet plurality ever gi panys mines, one mile west of McCnr-tai- lish and work a weekly fast service the second was taken to tha park, of the Masonic order of Iowa, has lost a candidate in Oregon. I. T. The dead are Andrew between Quebec and Liverpool daring j where he was hanged and then riddled his right hand from the effects of C. G. Baby, auditor of Colj Dazell and James Brown. The names the summer, and between Halifax and and cut to pieces. Both handshake with a friend. The grip winter, with a good with bullets of the two injured men have not been Liverpool in the fax, Wash., baa been sentenced toeib) freight service, iB causing considerable whites and negroes are enraged and in received waa so hard that several of in the penitentiary. Baby learned. Brown was the son c stir in England, where it is hailed with arms. The trouble out of the tha small bones were broken and years in June of stealing a warn convicted Bennett Brown of Hnntingtou, Ark., delight as being an offset to J. Pier-po- murder of Chief of grows Police Bud Wilthe southern manager of the Central Morgans shipping combine. The moth of Elkins. Several other arrests afterward caused a cancerous growth. for $1,753 issued to the AmnriWj Coal & Coke company, and was also became necessary and the evening papers have flaming headlines, have been made and Bridge company. He has given noli lynching seemed Amputation nephew of Superintendent Brown of reading, English combination to fight imminent hasTieen performed. operation of appeal. the San Bois mine. the American trust," etc. ' W. C. An Indians Bed Man. Murderer Boy Reprieved. Pratt, a sheep boss in the Bntte Burglar Fatally Wonnded. LEAPED INTO A FUNNEL. Abont noon Governor Fergnaon of Oklahoma has ploy of Andrew Fergus, near Thursday while Assistau t A burglar, who refused to give his name and upon whom nothing was Kansas Han Adopts Horrible Method to Cashier Prettipe was in the Fortville, commuted the death sentence of Cephus Benton, Monk, who killed a d End Existence, named McClure and tried man Bruner to life imprisonment. Ind., bank alone, a He was found whereby his identity could be came in, pointed a revolver at Prettipe to have been hanged at Tecumseh on burn the body, was found in the K Olin G relish, aged 23, of Leavenwas shot and mortally established, Ha had ' coil t worth, Kan., committed suicide be' and fired. The ball went wild. The Friday for the mnrder of Martin West lands dead. wounded as he attempted to make tween Lebanon and Springfield, Mo., man then demanded that Prettipe give near Violet Springs, Okla., in Decemsuicide. escape from the rear of the residence ber last. The governor had kept The shot atR. 8. Ellinger ot Boise, Ida., b of Samuel Treloar, In Butte. Mrs. by leaping into the funnel of .a loco- him $2,500 or be killed. of secret tracted the decision the motive attention the outaide because we&tbound Frisco alwas people it drawing Treloar heard the burglar at his work organized the Wyoming-Michlg- a According to passengers and the robber ran. He escaped to the leged that mobs were waiting on the company, todevelop lands inJtheSprkf and gave the alarm. Hugh Anderson, passenger. witnessed the scene, Grelish woods half a mile away, where a posse decision to act. Bruner has been rea neighbor, responded, and upon the who Valley, Wyo., .field. The land climbed on top of the water tank and of twenty-fiv- e men captured him after moved from Tecumseh. The reason the Union Pacific railroad, and is robber refusing to stop, fired at himi with a whoop dove into the funnel. 6, for the commutation was the of sidered the bullet penetrating his abdomen He was pulled out by the trainmen wounding him. He fired hia pistol re- the prisoner, being only 14 youth old, among the best location K years with difficulty, terribly burned and peatedly, but hit nobody. while the murdered boy was 12. and bringing him to the ground. the field. dead. Wireless Abdre Yarbrangh, an employe l1, New of Carrie In Telegraphy Her Death Heart. Hatpin Rivals Fought to Finish. Big Blaze In Seattle. in Washington, was killed sawmill Clarence Leone of son for the two late Mackay, Jeodie, a Frank Carlson and George Baldwin, years novice Fire totally destroyed the plant of a W. John at a convent in Flushing, L. I., is dead falling tree on the 24th. The $, Mackay, who was a passenger two Portland, Ore., youths of 19, the Bryant Lumber and Shingle com-- v the unfortunate man on struck on board the Cunardline Cama after steamer long and mysterious illness quarreled over two girls, to whom both, pany at Fremont, a suburb of Seattle, the bm were paying attention. Carlson chal- shortly before noon Friday. The mill pania from New York July 19th, which which had baffled medical science. An head, crushing it ao badly lived oozed he which out, arrived at despite Queenstown Thursday, re autopsy was per farmed and in the relenged Baldwin to fight. The fight and all the outbuildings, with the extook place with bare knuckles in the ception of two dry kilns, were burned, ceived the news of hia fathers death gion of the heart and piercing the after the accident. not wireless telegraphy at 3 p. m. July pericardium was found a headless 8pokane officials have decided presence of Carlsons brothers and other and the fire was with difficulty kept by steel E4th from the westbound steamer Sax-onGraham. Mr. and Mrs. hatpin four and a quarter Inches long. prosecute friends, and of Baldwins father, brothfrom spreading to adjacent property. of the same line. Mr. Mackay re- In the stomach was found er and other followers. After two The loss ia estimated at $50,000. The of refused to call In a doctor whea part ronnde of fierce fighting, Carlson re- company refuses to make a statement ceived a large number of telegrams another hatpin one and a quarter inches their children were attacked with dvp here. The wireless news created the long, also headless. The The ceived a blow in the stomach and fell regarding either loss or insurance, young woman theria, three of whom died. to the ground. When picked np It was large cumber of men are out of work greatest sympathy for Mr. Mackay had complained of pains in the stomach legislature will probably pan since 1896. among the Campaniaa passengers. found he was dead. governing such eases. as a result of the fire. FURIOUS ROUNDS. 1 j ' $ Fan-Haud- le ' anti-toxin- e. . n, ty ut well-dresse- 1 1 ia |