OCR Text |
Show COTTON FLOODS MILLS ARE SILENT. Seven Big Plants at Lowell, Mass, Are Closed Down. Ttrai ef hkMdftlMI For the first time In many years on urn YNft ! a working day the bells on the great is Mostas it mm ha cotton mills in Lowell, Mass., were silent Monday morning, and the Btreets, attfce PM omo m BrifhaB City second elaae by the hurry and usually marked on their way to of bustle thousands TIOK STANDING. Editor. work, were still and almost deserted. of the seven immCkit to CorroopoodoBto. Although the shut-dow- n liras of aewa art aoUeitad from all parts at plants affected by the strike order of IhS QOVStffs Writ upon oaa aide at the paper aaly. the textile council, which was passed Write proper aamaa plainly. to enforce a demand for a 10 per cent ha fro tee la order to proteat publisher from Irresponsible eRppaa, the full Increase in wages was issued SaturKltioaathe eom to all author aaoeld ho tlcaad auinleatlona. The ideality of eorrespondenta day, its full effect was not apparent wUi he okhhald wheaaror deal red. until Monday. Absolute quiet prevailed in the section occupied by the THURSDAY. PUBLISHED EVERY cotton factories. The period of inactivity, the duration of which cannot be UTAH STATE NEWS. definitely predicted, began without a notable incident, save perhaps the fact ' The officials of Deseret are after that a few men and women who had (gamblers at that place, several arrests started to finish up some work in one ad convictions having been made re- or two of the mills were turned back cently. by committees from the unions. ' P. V. De Graw, a former resident of WHIPPED FILIPINO TO DEATH. Salt Lake City, has been appointed to the position of eastern press rep Outrage Perpetrated by Native Officer cesentatlve of the SL Louis exposition. During Regular Officer's Absence. Charles Harris of Lefii wss last The war department la investigating week thrown from a fractious brocho, charges that have been filed Sis head striking a telephone pole, In Lieutenant Colonel Robert L.against How-elcting Injuries which will lay him up who was In command of a poet in . for a few days. northern Luzon In 1899. The charge Miles Romney, who shot and killed relates to cruelties to Flllplnoe, alleBis former partner, Henry Strong, In a gations being made that Lieutenant aloon In Salt Lake City, last Septem- Colonel Howsee wae cognizant of the ber, has been acquitted of the charge fact that, two natives were whipped of murder by a jury. to death, and that no punishment of Eighteen new cases of smallpox de- the offenders waa ordered. It is stated veloped In Salt Lake City last week. at the war department that so far as During the week thirty four cases re- investigated, It appears that the alcases in leged outrage was perpetrated by a nacovered, leaving seventy-on- e tive officers while Colonel Howsee wad the detention hospital. absent after hostile Filipinos. The Mary Jane Smith of Salt Lake City, matter been brought to the attenhas woman accused of murderthe negro of Colonel Howsee, and a partial tion a Daniel miner, by placing Ryan, ing In his beer, will be placed reply made that an investigation at the , morphine time showed that only one native had ; on trial during the week. The son of John Groes- - died, and that his death was not due but to diabetes. beck of Springville fell under a wagon to which was heavily loaded with gravel, DEAD RETURNS TO LIFE. the wheels passing over one of his Montana Man Revives After Being legs, crushing it very badly. Frederick Walls of Santaquin cele- - Pronounced Dead by Three Doctors. After being dead half an hour, aa brated his 78th birthday on the 26th, thirteen of his children being present. supposed by three reputable physicians, VIril Wood of Missoula, Mont, Mr. Walls has eighty grandchildren came to life again. This case is cons and twelve An effort is being made to have sidered by Missoula physicians to be street car men of Salt Lake City go to a remarkable one. Wood was under, Seattle to take the place of striking going an operation In the hospital, and was u'.der an anaesthetic. He is a carmen, but there will be very few, young man, and the operation had U any, of the men who will go. been concluded, when suddenly respirThe Faremrs union of Wellsville, ation ceased and his heart stopped ' which Is now operating a big creambeating. For half an hour three phyery there, is preparing to erect a lifty-barr- sicians worked on him without a sign flour mill at Wellsville. It is of life. They thought him dead. Sudthe intention to have the mill In readhe opened his eyes, and in redenly iness for next seasons crop. sponse to continued exertions on the Fred George, under life sentence at part of physicians, began to breathe. . the state prison and out on parole, He is said to be on the road to remade an attempt to escape last week covery. but was run down by prison guards. WORKING ON MOFFAT ROAD. George begged his captors to kill him instead of taking him back to prison. Contracts Awarded for More Grading The messenger boys in the employ on the New Line. f the Western Union Telegraph comA special from Denver says that conpany's office at Salt Lake City went tracts have been let for the gradlng'of out on a strike on Saturday of last the line of the new Moffat road from week, and refused to return until cer- Utah Junction, where the road will tain demands they made were granted. connect with the joint C. ft S. and The boys were out but a few hours Burlington tracks to Leyden Junction, when they gained their point and rethe present eastern terminus of the turned to work. line. The work covers nine and a half Rev. Dr. J. I Leillch, who, for the miles. It was originally Intended that past year and a half, has been In the tracks of the Denver ft Northwestcharge of the Utah mission of the ern, the electric line, would be used Methodist Episcopal church, has been between Arvada and Leyden Junction, removed from that position. The removal of Mr. Leilich is the result of a saving about five miles of separate protest against his retention by the construction. It has been decided, inministers of the Utah mission. stead, to build an entirely separate The prize of $50 offered by the se- line for the steam road. nior class of Stanford university for A Mycterioua Rainstorm at Walter, the best farce written for presentaIdaho. tion during' the senior week has been A remarkable occurrence happened awarded to Waldemar Young of Salt Lake and Ralph Renaud of Washing- at Weleer, Idaho, Monday afternoon. ton, D. C. Young was formerly a re- During a heavy shower there was a " fall of Borne alkaline substance. It porter on a Salt Lake City paper. Bessie Knecht of Salt Lake has made white spots on everything It slept for the past month, and there touched, windows were white with it appears to be no hope of her awak- It had a salty taste. Just previous to ening. Miss Knecht is about 22 years the rain a large yellowish cloud was of age, and her affliction is regarded observed In the heavens. Many peras the result of a case of scarlet fever sons are of the opinion that It is volseveral years ago. The doctors are canic ashes, but where It came from is considerably puzzled over her case. a mystery. At Castle Gate last week a large Mysterious Death From Lockjaw. boulder became dislodged from the who was taken to . Patrick Baron, side of he canyon and crashed the hospital, New York Presbyterian through the house of Reese Lewis, on Saturday, suffering from lockCity, kitchen. Mrs. Lewis and wrecking the her baby had a miraculous escape jaw, la dead. Baron waa found by a policeman in an unconscious condition from death. on the stoop of a house on Seventy-fiftThe Railway Age credits the Rl street, and was taken to the hosGrande with ?$2 miles of new road to pital, where he waa found to be sufferbe constructed this year. Among the ing from lockjaw. He regained conlines is one from Colton to the junc- sciousness and waa able to tell his name and age, bnt could not tell where tion of Strawberry creek and the he lived, nor could he tell of any ine a distance of sixty-onjury he has received that would be ' TGi.- likely to cause lockjaw. 2 At the annual convention of the exMan Kills Himself and Pennsylvania ecutive board of the National Ooouet; Wife After a Quarrel. of Women held In New Orleans, Mraj Susan Young Gates of Utah submitted - W. 3. Cogaa of 8axton. Pa., ahot and a report showing the seed work that killed hie wife and then himself at had been done through, the press dur- the railroad depot at Hyntnan1 Monday. He and his wife had been quarreling, ing the past year. , The city of Richfield Is to havs an bnt he kissed her and bade her goodelectric light plant, constructed by bye, bought a ticked and boarded the local capital. The power will be se- train. He walked through one car, came out again on the platform, apcured from the Sevier river by taking the water of the Sevier valley proached his wife, and, with an oath, whipped out a revolver and shot her, canal out at a higher point and utiliskilling her Instantly. He then coming the power produced by the fall. mitted suicide. The Ogden Sugar company already Yawned Until She Died. has contracts with the farmers for After, yawning without Interruption acres of beets ,and will likely have 1,000 acres more before the close of toy three days, despite every effort to the planting season, which begins this relieve her. Mrs. William Henry Jen ner of Oshkosh, Wis., is dead., Physl week. The plant for manufacturing clans decided that the woman was brown sugar is also being installed. sufferng from obscure lesion of the The people of Sevier county are cirbrain, producing laryngial spasms. culating petitions praying for the esRemedies and anaesthetics 'were ad tablishment of one of the five experiministered wthout effect. Mrs. Jenner ment farms provided for by the legislature In that county. They are also unable to sleep, yawned until she working for the establishment in the could do so no more from lack of mountains of that county of an oats strength, and then died. , . farm. RAXB1MS vno,rMKM(n. ji (tint nti. i e, ! ru ,4 -- ,n i l i . ! J 1 i $ ( Du-rive- r, 3,-6- IN THE SOUTH. BURDICK High Water is Still Causing Much Uneasiness in Miaslasippi. CA8E CLOSED. ' "OVER THE LONG DIVIDE." No One Charged With the Crime, and Mystery Will Go Unsolved. The inquest Into the death of Edwin L. Burdick, who was murdered jus. a month ago in his home on Ashland afteravenue, Buffalo, ended Thurs-lanoon. At the lose of the inquest Judge Murphy announced that an official inquiry into the tragic death of Arthur Pennell, a ho has figured sc prominently in the Burdick inquest, will begin next Monday. Aside from the failure of the authorities to secure evidence bearing directly upon the commission of the crime, or to establish tne Identity of the murderer, there is a feeling of satisfaction that the name of Mr. Burdick has been lifted from the mire in which it was first dragged and his character shown in its true light. The evidence brought out during the examination of witCoats-wortnesses by District Attorney ' has shown Burdick to have-beea loving father, always willing to sacrifice his own happiness and pride for the sake of his children; that he was the victim of false friendship, broken pledges, and, in the face of it all, was forgiving, indulgent husband. The efforts of the authorities to fix the crime upon Borne one will not end with the inquest. At the same time there is tittle hope of success iu this undertaking, and the murder probably will go down In criminal history ns one of the great unsolved mysteries. With a tremendous crash the levee four miles south of Greenville, Miss., gave way at 11 oclock Friday, and great quantities or , water are now crevasse, pouring through a 300-forapidly flooding the most fertile land in the great Yazoo delta. Major Sears, In charge of the government engineers office at this point, says it Is the worst break ever experienced on the Mississippi side, and he , states that the whole delta from' Greenville to Vicksburg will be flooded. This is the first break repotted on the Mls-sipside during the present high water. A New Orleans dispatch says interest in the flood situation there centers in the break at Hymella, forty mlleB above the city, and the disastrous crevasse reported south of Greenville. Cotton meft felt especially concerned with respect to the latter. While this break doubtless will cause a fall In the river in the vicinity of Greenville and for a considerable distance south, the eater which goes through must inevitably return to the Mississippi through the Yazoo, thus prolonging the period of high water south of that point. The crevasse Is in the heart of one of the richest sugar districts in Louisiana. If it should get beyond control many valuable plantations doubtless will be covered wtih water in a few days. The Texas Pacific and South Pacific roads have not thus far been affected, but trouble Is likely to occur if the crevasse is not closed. It Is exDEAD MAN WAS HUNGRY. pected at the Illinois Central office that through traffic over the Mississippi valley road will be suspended as Man Revive After Being Laid Out, a rpsult of the disaster. The belief Eatc Hearty Meal and Then Relapses. that the high water levee was cut in New York physicians are Investigatsections is order to relieve other strong and any attempt to repeat the ing at the Seney hospital. In Brooklyn, action i8 likely to be followed by the remarkable case of Joseph Robinson, who, after being pronounced dead by several surgeons, suddenly awakFIGHTING FILIPINOS. ened, ate a hearty meal and against Macabebe Scouts Defeat San Miguete relapsed into the first mysterious Forces in Rlzal Province. state. His limbs became rigid, his Two companies of Macabebe scouts body cold, and although every effort signally defeated the main body of San known to experts was restorted to to Miguels forces Friday. It is believed find if there was life, they failed. RobSan Miguel was killed. Lieutenant inson, who formerly was an orderly Reese was seriously wounded. The at the Seney hospital, was found in an scouts lost three men killed and had unconscious condition on the street A doctor was called, who began working eleven men wounded. The enemy occupied an entrenched on the man. At the end of five hours position midway between Marinqulna, he said Robinson waa dead, hla heart San Francisco and Del Monte and had to perform any funcit erected a stone fort, which was garri- failing, seemed, was still color in his There tion. soned by 200 men. The first and fourth companies of Macabebes, commanded cheeks, and to make sure the man was by lieutenants Reese and Nickerson, beyond recall, the surgeon placed a respectively, attacked the enemys po- glaa over hla mouth. No moisture sition, but as the scouts were exposed to the fire of the enemy In a manner gathered and the morgue officials which placed the Macabebea at a dis- were about to be notified when Robin! decided son suddenly awoke. There were advantage. the lieutenants after an hour's fighting to surround about him discussTng hla strange the position and charge, after having divided their companies. The two of- death. I guess there must be some misficers then led a gallant and successful charge, during which Lieutenant take, he said. Thereupon he jumped Reese fell seriously wounded. The to his feet and demanded to know enemy then broke and ran, leaving where he was. The frightened policeforty five men dead on the field, Inman and Dr. notified the beia sergeant who a cluding general officer, lieved to be San Miguel, though hla Beecher returned. After another exidentity is Incomplete. amination of Robinson he said he dU not understand hia peculltr stye,, but THE NICARAGUA SQUABBLE. thought he hd recovered. Robinson Real Situation In That Country la Not then ate a hearty dinner, fell Into a Known. awakened sep and has not been of Nicaragua since. The revolutionists have captured some of the steamers APED FAMOUS OUTLAW. plying on Lake Nicaragua and have left the department of Chontalea, Indiana Boys Get Into Trouble which has prevented President Through Reading Trashy Literature. forces from attacking them. The Charles Cecil and Harry Wilkinson howofficial advices from Managua, ever, say the rising has been sup- have confessed to the Marlon, Ind., popressed. On the other hand, there are lice to being members of a gang of reports that a revolutionary movement boys who bad made several attempts is aided by another Central American If this Is the case the to wreck Big Four passenger trains government. outbreak Is more serious than Presi- during the last few days near Marion. dent Zelaya Is willing to admit The "Why, Jesse James did," said one of strict censorship maintained over dis- the boys, "and we thought that we patches allows only official news to wreck the trains and rob the leave Nicaragua. Consequently, the copld real situation In that country la not passengers, too. Both boys have been known. Incessant readers of trashy literature. "Over the Lohg Divide!" With anxious thought hu an answer to this question sought. What Ues beyond? The entire human race, Chaldea, Syria, Egypt, Greece and Rome, Have crossed the crest to an unfathomed home. Nor knew the semblance of that dwelling place That waited them; with portals dark and wide Beyond the summit of the Long Divide. capn was glad enansh to m him; so hb didnt do cothtaw' tha chief o polio all about It to1 boat went on, as usual, Up "1 dont know what the polk "' ha done about it when the yoaJT ler got well enough to get ont wf, didnt wait to get well. PHr Jr 'bp that same night, all hacdJJL8 as he was, an got out oB the somehow an found Simmon hotel where he was stoppin1 ... . Jw him dead in the bar York Sun. Man th?, g Over the Long Divide! the endless streams Of passing mortals leave us but their dreams. The Hindoo of Nirvana, while on fields Elysian Tile Greek and Roman sported, and the souls Of Odins warriors drained their wassail bowls; Saint John In his Apocalyptic vision Bland choral symphonies, resounding wide From golden harps, beyond the Long .Divide. "HE NEVER BLAMED THE BOOjgJ .! Tramp Peddles Merry Jingto Contain a Moral. j An old tramp, tousled and peddles this every day on the lu ery, always with these word Not copyrighte- i husky tones: downer but the Truth. He took a bottle up to bed Drank whisky hot each night Drank cocktails in the moraine. Beyond the Long Divide, the Indian found Wide prairie spread, a happy hunting ground; No dreams agreed, Hope colored every thought. Eternal Hope! the only gift of heaven Left In the casket by Fandora riven. Although uo answering message she has brought. Illumed by Faith, shes yet the only guide To light the traveler o'qr the Long Divide! Von W In Forest and Stream. But never could get tight He shivered In the evening And always had the blues Until he took a bowl or two-B- ut he never blamed the boose. His Joints were full of rheumetti His appetite was slack, He had pain between hi And chill ran down hi bach.""' He Buffered from insomnia" At night he couldn't moose-Hseid It we the climate '' But he never blamed the boeit Hie constitution waa run down At least, that's what he laid Hi lea were swelled each mors ha And ne often had (welled heel fours, an both reckonin on foolin the He tackled beer, wine, whlaky other. ' And if didn't fuse It bein Simmons' bet be pot a He blamedtheyIt to dyspepsia never blamed he the But thousand dollars in the pot, an Mas- h n e Theres a heap o talk sometimes about the bad men that cavorts round some parts o the country where taint settled up much, an does gun plan a an ters aays: He said he couldn't sleep it aldu. for fun, ahootln up And he always had bad dreaaa-H" Til see your thousand an bet you killin tenderfoots now an then, while claimed he always laid awtfc more aa aa much got. off TUI early sunrise beam. red the you've workln liquor theyre It was malaria He I c'd an near thought stood "I the Simmons, theyre took, said Caleb Mix, Alas, twas but a ruse -veteran bartender on the Mississippi hear a sort o click that I thought He blamed It onto everything But he never blamed the boo, first was the click of a gun, but I seen river packet. City of Natchez. But I reckon that they aint none he had both hands on the table, so I His liver needed scraping, ' And hla kidneys had the gout: on em any more ornery nor the bad reckoned it must ha' been his jaws. of swallowed lots He blttera men that useter travel the Misslssip Anyway they was clinched when he Till at last he cleaned them out answered, an he spoke through his His leg were swelled with dromy. afore the war. Till he had to cut his show; "There was one feller that come teeth, sayin: He blamed It to the doctors ' ' bet. Make But he never blamed the boo, that your so from New Orleans, they said, Well, o course Masters couldnt Then be had the tremens, traveled, the boats a good deal, Just And he tackled rats and make; store the war, that come as near bein make him tell the size of hia pile he had the fever. a devil as anybody I ever aforehand, so he shoved his own pile First And then he had the shakes. seen. I never hear none o' these forward, him havin considerable more At last he had a funeral, And the mourners had the hluw, stories about bad men thout thinkin In sight than Simmons. And the epitaph they carved for ta " is that? much how a says in was do Well, him I seen o him, an a thing He never blamed the booe. Simmons, an Masters Tiad to stop an poker game one night Every night tbe same old trig He called hisaelf Harry Simmons, count it. It took a minute or ao, an a dime for a bed and fiut keeps was he he when says: reel done, an mebbe that might ha been his saves from the sales of q all he e an sixty-fivhundred Theres name. I dont know. But there was ingles. The remainder goes for q. them 't said his old man made him forty dollars. "Then Simmons began to unbutton booze. New York Sun. take another name when he paid him fifty thousand dollars to get out an hia clothes, there bein no women HEALTH LAWS IN ENQLAK& never have nothin more to do with round, an reachin' hia money belt he hla own folks. Physician Satisfied They Hava lw He were a tall, slender, wiry devil, Productive ef Good. ; one an blue eye with jet black hair time is this fawffiy Everybody by an one that was a sort o gray-greewith the pronouncement ot Nhu You couldnt never forget hla face if that spitting is a habit, whick, apt you seen It once. He were n dandy, from ita unpleasant nature, ti trut, river gamUke most o the In the case of consumptive blers was them days, an were as with great danger to the attics t pticler as a woman about hla cloea. large. Something must have bene "An he wore Jewelry, like the rest com pll shed in the way of on em did, that waa more like a the practice from the advice to womaas than a mans. But you didnt from it legibly displayed ia (C. want to make no mistake about him bein womanish when It came to a places, from tramcars to postoCa Local lawa are also la operation t fight or a game o draw. the punishment of thote who tCo. "When it was card playin be were A Liverpool investigation shoved as steady aa a clock an, took chances of 105 "samples of expectoratiM t thatd make a tight rope walker gray amined five contained virulent, tt. headed. An when it was fight, he were a bundle o wildcats, with about is, active bacilli of tuberculosis. Is at least glad to see the coadifioit as much pity in him as a game cock. "They was playin a hard game one railway carriages is beginning to n ceive attention. They are pltetf night when the boat come up toward much requiring attention In thii a Vicksburg, an it were a sure case o spect. A fine of 15s. each was IO dog eat dog, for there want a sucker on the boat that any of em thought ed on two men at Forth the other Id was worth the trouble o catchin, an forapitting in a railway earrings. IV three on em was playin together-- all prosecution was undertaken, hf tt. He Jumped at Simmons. professionals, an all three bad county council of Glamorgan. i men. pulled out a wad o big bills as big as such legislation is not only Mt&i, "Simmons was the worst o the lot, your fist but its beneficial effect will Mt k " Ill see that, be says, countin out limited to suppressing a buIom but George Masters, a Vicksburg man, and Billy Eaton, a feller fm Texas, the money, an go you ten thousand Through the operation of the h ft) waa both ugly customers for any man more. thoughts of the nation will h to run up against thouten he had his ."That was puttin the boot on the ed toward the prevention of fczx, other leg, for all t Masters cd dig up and this alone must be regarded bk gun in his hand full cocked. hundred, but he eminently desirable result Df. I They was playin a heavy game, waa about twenty-fiv- e for they was all well fixed, an any was game qn he called for a show for drew Wilson in the London Ckrah one on em stood to lose eight or ten his pile. An' on the show down he thousand afore goin broke. Luck run flashed four kings against Simmons' Prince Bismarck's Patriots against Simmons for the first hour or four tens. No even casual mention of so, an It were easy to see that he "Well, there want no disputin the marck which omits eating and -were gettln'"ugly, not that he said cards, but I moved away a little, kind ing Is complete. Hear him, d anything, for they didn't none on enN o lookin for a disturbance, specially the limits of convivial patrlotlntf Girl Falls Sixty do no talkin to apeak of, but hla eyes aa T heerd that click o Simmons' the New York Evening Post Without Injury. looked wickedern usual, an hla jaw Jaws again, but he didnt say nothin' Miss Lou Storme of Seattle had waa sot like a steel trap. lie were an twould ha been a good thing for -- "On one occasion I was dlnlrj t narrow escape from succeeding in her playin monstrous cautious, though, a young feller that stood by It hed his gracious majesty (tfle present peror). I had some champagt' attempt at suicide Thursday morning an hadn't lost moren three or four showed the same sense. intaste of Srhlch-But he wa'nt hardly moren a boy glass, the when che leaped from a balcony sixty thousand when he seen, or thought , butler t the When auspicious. o a back a chanst he seen, gettin feet to the ground below. She struck though he were a big, husky chap that passed the table I tried to gat It s were traveling so I heerd, f'm part of It. squarely on her head, driving a hole good on the bottle, tutttif were Masters deal an a Jack "It an I reckon he at the label up North, In the ground threo Inches deep. She for a napkins impossible, first Simmons in had it. pot, with $30 didn't know the customs o the river, was not even rendered unconscious by say an he opened it for the size wrapped around it I then tmei t ofjt. for he spoke right out in a the emperor to Inquire the the fall, and not a bone was broken. Eaton come in an Masters raised it fool way, sayin': the particular brand, when his t . She endeavored to persuade the of- thirty. Evidently that were Just what Well, that was the most extraordi-naficers who picked her up to allow her Simmons was lookin for, for he raised ty blurted out that it was indc . play I ever saw. to walk to the hospital man champagne Deutacher f It fifty more, an then Eaton took a There was two or three other men weln. Yes, the emperor said, 1 whack at it standin by, too, lookin on at the Over a Hundred Years Old. , It from motives of economy, as i reckon he bdnt raised on the game, an they sort o sidestepped "I Bom in 1802 in New oYrk City, Isaac S first round, for fear o' scarin Masters same as. I had, but the young feller a large family, and I have t, B. Price last Thursday celebrated his officers to It recommended my stood there just as If he hadnt said I again, same reason. 101st birthday. Then, During his life Mr. o kind lookin' 'ston nothin', only - from K drink It patriotic once been Price has only outside of ished, same as he said he was, an' Thereupon I said to the sc the city limits; he has never been Simmons turned round to him. "And what did you find remark With' me, your majesty,ot ps out of the states he haa never ridden short at the region cj able in the play, dr? he aaid as polite on a trolley car, and although he has ' ach. a ae beea he'd Skin!, to if the stronger crossed the East river many times, he have a drink.' has never been . over the Brooklyn One of Ochiltree's Atari. Why, says the boy, I dont CoL James Is.' Jones could: bridge. Mr. Price cast his vote In 1126 . You draw's card. why you didnt for John Quincy Adams for president, Thomas P. Ochiltree the late could have r and has voted at every presidential of the bravest men that ever ' finished never that He sentence, C-election since that time. . " for as quick as a flash Simmons shoe leather. "Why said one t ia "I remember that Financier Lands In Prison. grabbed a glass half full o whisky that stood on the table, an threw the colonels cavalry regiment,:; A sensation was caused la Lexing ed to assault a battery that liquor square in the boys face. ton, Ky., when the Jury returned a verk That what we do with fools ing much trouble. Ochiltree ton" dict of three years In the penitentiary he when and advaflee, whoa criticise they down this way bristil.. for Dr. A. P. Taylor, a prominent phygentleman's play at poker, he say a, at the mouth ef theand saw 1 looked around he ns .no cool as not but sician, and president of the Industrial before, just wqre not following. He galL. , Mutual Deposit company, which failed polite. Well, the boy wna good grit, evea and denounced them. ( a year ago. The charge was embesale-men- t Were you not afraid" . waa a fool, an' ho jumped at he If the by appropriating surplus Simmon an the. next minute they asked. . t fund to dividends when no dividend Afraid? Thunder! No, waa rollin on the floor. I seen Simhad been earned. There are three a. He was h wiry devil, mons pull hla knife as they went down reply, but fifteen minutes more indictments against Taylor. Fifty my horss at, but seein how things laid, he an-- reckoned to see the other feller turned to our camp other simlar indictments are to be raised Simmons fifty. Then Masters killed, but that want Slmmong Idea, dead of heart disease."? tried against prominent citizens. Times. hlsted It a hundred, an Simmons made it appears. . , Lightnng Stopped Card Game. it a hundred more, so Eaton, havin a They struggled for a little bit It Crenjes Flag of Trues At Dalton, Wis., while John Murray, small straight, kind o' hauled in his didnt seem ten seconds, an Simmons Roberto town In Lord horns, an just trailed. jumped up, laughing. . He had cut Wiliam Truman, Moses Crane. O. London, Is S Portland an nose ears his o place, He more a times trailed both the couple plumb boys Adams and Mathew Ritter, old sol - estlng relic which never f while Simmons an Masters was a off.. , , 8ns diers, were playing a game of cards In boostin' each other a hundred at a You'd ha thought Simmonad ha' tract attention. It t the G. A. R. hall, the structure was piece white clean over he were but there out of but his want been seeing nobody lynched, struck by lightnng and badly wrecked clip, aid Is The oil cloth on the card table was depth he folded on the third raise, in the saloon that felt like tacklin irregular shape, Very l torn to shreds and the men knocked an the others kept on till they had him, specially aa he still had the knife conspicuous position. non it, to notice fail ors in an was thousand two hand the It, Careful, wipin hls pot. in apiece to the floor. Some of their clothes what it is until they! "Then Simmons Just made good an on his handkerchief. were tom from them, and Adams had Then they learn that it sent a shoe tom from his foot. Mathew when Masters ast him how many cards "The boat was just tyin up at the Ritter waa thrown several feet and he wanted he said he reckoned hed Vicksburg levee, an we took the boy "flag of truce" which he nt sustained a gash on the head and is play what he had. So Masters, he ashore an put him In the hospital. paratory to bis surrender years said to be in a rrtical condition. topd pat, too, both on em having Simmons went ashore, too, an tb berg, now nearly three bar-room- sure-enoug- h top-notc- h aev-era- Ze-lay- May Burn Negro. Harvey Williams, a negro, assaulted daughter Mary Jones, the of a white miner, and left her for dead on the mountain between Pocahontas, Va., and Cooper, W. Va. After regaining consciousness the girl managed to reach her home. Several posses immediately went in search of the negro and he was located near Pocahontas, taken to Bramwell and lodged In jail. The jail Is heavily guarded, but the people declare they will secure the negro and burn him at the stake. Boy ia Driven Ineane aa the Reeult ef Hazing. Earl Cleaves, aged 19, of Butte, has gone insane as the result of hazing at a school of technology at Janesville, Wis. The boy is on the way back to Butte In charge of his mother, and at 8ionx City tried to get away from her. He maintains that he was abused, hut cannot tell the nature of the mistreatment The mother ilyi the school authorities refused to tell. her anything. They formerly lived In Sionx City, and Stopped there on the way home. It'e Up to the Marklee. The executive board of District No. Pa.) United Mine Workers of America, has ' notified ' G. B. Markle ft Co. and A. Pardee ft Co., Independent coal operators, that the miners will Insist upon the award of the strike commission being carried 'out to the letter. These two firms, according to members of the board, have suggested to the men that work he continued under existing conditions, without regard to the arbitrament The proposition was rejected at a meeting of the executive board, 7, (Hazleton, Robbed in Gay Parle. The Paris Temps says a wealthy American merchant, whose name la not given, has been the victim of a sensational assault and robbery there He was induced, according to the paper mentioned, to visit quarters occu pled by parties who represented themselves as dealers In antiquities. Then the American was Bet upon, badly choked and robbed of a pocketbook containing $500 and of L four4 valuable Lin MU VlliUI VWVllj1. 1UQO, U0 WMI.VU young Englishman Is under arrest 1 1k; t t Hard-Heade- some-where- -- good-nature- -- T-to- ' -- 1 -- s( H pj bl rj iJ e |