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Show h (EU&er LEI Qcxva ARGENTINA TROOPS MUTINY TWO Post OfBoe at Brigham blml M lbSMoad lua matter. MARCHING REGIMENTS UPON CAPITAL CITY. j City H Government Leaders Had Expected the Outbreak and Have Taken Measures to Suppress It. NOBHAN LEE, Editor. An insurrection has broken out in Buenos Ayres, Argentina. Several police posts have been attacked by bands of about thirty men each, but the assailants nearly everywhere were recaptured by the police. An attack on the arsenal was also repeled. It Is rim III mi rumored that two regiments of troops PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. have mutinied and arc man h ng on the capital. The Argentine gi vornment, which UTAH STATE NEWS. appears to have been acquainted with Roy Curtis, a well known young the plans of the leaders of the plot, man of Sprlngvllle. was killed by a took timely measures to suppress the Iblast while working at Las Vegas, uprising and seems to have eomp'etu control of the situation. Nevada, As a result of the insurrectionary Salt Lake seems to be suffering from an influx of undesirable characters, movement which broke out not only in bold-up- s and robberies being a nightly Buenos Ayres, but in other cities ol Argentina, the governme.it has issued occurrence. a decree establisi ing a state of siege An epidemic of measles is raging in for, thirty days throughout the whole betwenty-threcases Salt Lake City, republic, and has ordered the mobiliing reported in two days the latter zation of the national guard. of week. INSTRUCTIONS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Item of nw ar aolieltad from all part ol fee country. Write upon one aide f the paper only. Write proper name plainly. In order to protect the sublleher from imposition from lrruponelble persoDa, the full Came of the author ahoold be eigned to all The Identity of oorreapondanta Will be withheld whenever dealred. e last A street car line is to be constructed during this season by the Ogden Rapid Transit company to the sanitarium at the mouth of Ogden canyon. The artificial stone factory at Lehl Junction is turning out an average of These are 2,000 blocks per day. hipped south as fast as manufactured. Lucy Bigelow Young, sixth wife of the late President Brigham Y'oung, died at her home in Salt Lake City on the 3rd, of pneumonia, after a two weeks illness. A. L. Johnson of Salt Itke City, resident agent of the Remington Typewriter company, is said to be short over $1,000 in his accounts. Johnson part President Quintana dec 'ares that the insurrection is direct d by persons who are irresponsible and without influence. The whole fie-- t remains loyal. Much praise is given the fire- men and sailors, none of whom abandoned their posts. Governor Freyro of the province of Santa be, who was in Buenos Ayres, has returned to Rosario on a torpedo boat. Many citizens have called on the chief of police and volunteered their services in aiding the authorities to suppress any new Insurrectionary movement. They were tuanked and informed that the government had at its disposal ample forces. Secretary Of War Godoy is preparing to nominate superior officers to command the government. The movement was instigated by the radical party, which was assisted bias disappeared. by seetions of the military, A few persons were killed or wounded In bidding for the construction of the disturbances. A decree hasduring been the Ogden public building the Stand- Issued prohibiting press comments on ard Construction company of Chicago the situation. was the lowest bidder. Its proposal SKIRMISHES ON THE SHAKHE. Was for $155,000. Lester Ogden and John Ball, two Russians Repulse Japanese, According to Russian Reports. Richfield youths, are serving out a sentence in the county jail for enDispatches from St. Petersburg say deavoring to purloin a large sack of that General Knropatkln, in a report to Emperor Nicholas, says: peanuts from a car at the depot. No fighting was reported on FebAnother spasm of morality has k truck Salt Lake City, as a result of ruary 4. At present activity Is con(Which several dancing halls are to be fined to operations by our volunteers, Iclosed, and girls are warned to keep which harass the enemy. There Is arOff the Btreets after certain hours. tillery firing on both sides, and a hasty Mrs. C. J. Edwards suicided at Park strengthening of positions by both the Russians and Japanese." City, taking carbolic acid. Mrs. EdGeneral Knropatkln, on Friday, rewards was a widow, with several chilthe of the Japanese adported dren, and worry and a constant strug-S- l vance guardrepulse on the left flank, toward for existence is said to have led Sanosyn and Chanson, with slight losses, the Japanese leaving fifty dead to the deed. on the field. j The Utah County Black Hawk war According to General Kuropatkins Veterans met in American Fork last last reports, which indicate the woundWeek and elected officers and decided ing of a third Russian general. the operations at Sandiapu upon Payson as the place for holding and the fighting at Shakhe have been their next encampment, which will be momentarily Suspended. held some time during August. Nine Sets of Triplets. Lee Gow, the Chinese gardener of President Roosevelt will be IntroForest Dale, who was arrested a week go for an attempted assault upon duced this week to the father and Beatrice Seager, has be mother of nine sets of triplets, and it come a raving maniac. It is now be- Is expected he will present them with lieved he was Insane at the time of the an autograph photo. George Y. Dun-villthe father, Is but forty-threassault A. W. Mountney, well known in Salt years old, and his wife Is thirty-eighThey live in Yankton, S. D. exLake City, and secretary of the Bam- pect to arrive in WashingtonTheyon a berger Exploration company, has dis- visit next week, and the senators and will take them to the appeared, and it is charged he Is short representatives white house. The twenty-sevechil(In his accounts to the amount of dren are nine sets of triplets, twenty-fou- r A fondness for poker is given as of whom are boys and three are jthe reason for his downfall. Kls. Advices from Beaver county are to Will Attend Inauguration. the effect that in the Wasatch King, Mrs. Mary Adelaide Fairbanks, ln the Beaver Lake district, a disclosof Senator Fairbanks, will mother ure of a highly oxidized iron, carrying better than the usual gold values, has travel clear across the continent a distance of 3,000 miles to see (been made In the vertical shaft which her son takenearly the oath of office as vice .the management is sinking. president of the United States. Among Several Murray business men have his other characteristics Mr. Fairbanks is noted for his kindness and recently been the victims of an ancient affection for the members of his famgraft, worked by a stranger. He rep- ily circle, which is reciprocated, resented to them that he was in charge and there is no doubtfully this will be the of a railroad construction gang, or- proudest moment of his aged mother's dered bills of goods, borrowed sums ot life. Mrs. Fairbanks is now in California. money and then ten-ida- y e, e t. disappeared. Buried beneath a pile of rocks In a secluded spot near Little mountain, fourteen miles west of Ogden, with the back of his head crushed and otherwise mutilated, the body of a man. supposed to be Enoch D. Jenkins, was found by a hunting party on Man Exploded When Thawed Out Peter Eberhart is supposed to be the name of a farm hand who, near SL Paul, Minn., drank a small bottle o! nitroglycerine on a wager, froze to death while walking home, and exSunday. efforts were made to ploded when t InstiA raid Is to he thaw him out. While the body was tuted by the Grocers and Butchers' In an outbuilding near a stove In association of Salt Lake. Such produce left as butter, cheese, canned goods and which was a roaring fire, the nitroother articles sold in packages will be glycerine exploded. The building was wrecked, and one button, a weighed, and if they fall short, the ccmpletely boot heel and a piece of watch-chaidealers say they will not agree to sell were U that was found of Peter. them. short-weigh- William J. Pickett has brought suit against a saloon in Ogden for the sum of $5,000 as damages. The suit Is a novel one. Plaintiff alleges that while In the place he was stricken with apoplexy and was thrown in a back room and allowed to remain there without care or attention. L. C. Rasmussen of Mt. Pleasant Is certainly unfortunate. Early last winter he had his leg broken, and was just able to get out again and attend to his work when an unruly cow kicked him, again breaking the leg in the same place, but making the break more serious than the first Emanuel Kahn, one of the most prominent business of Salt Lake, died In San Francisco on the 31st, where he had gone for his health. Mr. Kahn came to Utah in 1864, being then em- ployed by his brother. Colonel Kahn, who established the first wholesale grocery store in Utjh. Quadruplets were born to Mrs. D. C. Benson of last week, but they all died within a few hours. There were three boys and a girl in the quartette, they all receiving names and consecration according to the rites of the Mormon church. The father is ot Logans efficient policemen. Had Ruined His Life. - A young woman, described as Louise Schroeder and Louisa Adams, was shot and killed by Emil Bollinger, a janitor, who was arrested after being seriously Injured in an attempt to escape. The shooting took place in a hotel in Chicago. Bollinger would offer no explanation of the tragedy except to say that he had shot the woman because she had ruined his life. The police learned that Bollingers wife is said to have left him two years ago on account of his attentions to the woman, APPLE Eight-Year-Ol- d CHOKES BOY. Lad Dies While Eating Fruit Harry Frankenberg, eight years old, choked to death at his parents home at Limerick, Pa. He was eating an apple, and while laughing a piece of the fruit lodged in his windpipe. The boy was in the midst ot the family circle at the time of the accident He fell to the floor, gasping and struggling, and expired before a physician could be summoned. WILL GET REPRESENTATION, TO WORKINGMEN. LOOT STORES DURING RIOTS Paternal Admonitions and $25,for Relief of Families of Murdered Strikers. THIEVES TAKE ADVANTAGE OF STRIKE IN WARSAW. Favorable results are expected to follow the audience given by Emperor Nicholas at Tsarskoe-Selto thirty-twand Set workmen representing the lead Houses and Shops pillaged BeClash Recent Fire on During ing industrial establishments of St and Police. tween Strikers Petersburg. In addition to paternal admonitions bestowed upon the work The official account of the disturb men, $25, OuO has been given by the emperor, empress and dowager em- ances at Warsaw on Janaury 27 and . press for the relief of me famines ot 28. published in the Aboul Varshavik-idnevikthe or badly (hose who were killed details thk beginning of wounded in the affairs of January 22. strike at Set am on January 27, with The manufacturers of St. Petersburg increasing disorder throughout the have made concessions to the strik- day. Earlier the strikers went about ers and contributed to the relief fund. compelling workmen of other estabThe situation in Poland and other of lishments to tease work until 15,000 . the provinces continues strained and were out by , Btrikes are reported from Irkutsk and became inhabitants Peaceable several other Siberian towns The reand famine, fearing tirement of Prince Sviatopolk-Mirspurchased all the available food supfrom the ministry of the interior has plies and besieged the bakeries. Riotbeen accomplished in such a way as ing began about 3 p. m., when there lo indicate that the emperor is satiswas an almost general cessation of fied to be rid of a minister of the work throughout the city, and owing princes avowed liberal tendeneies. to the turbulent attitude of piobs parading the streets the police were reLAND FRAUDS IN OREGON. Gives 000 WHOM, Proprietor. TSRMS OF SOBSCKIPTIONl Ob Tear, la MIiuh... Month tlx Month......-..- .. CZAR TALKS - mid-day- panic-stricke- inforced by soldiers. At 5 p. m. the strikers attacked the police and gendarmes, stoaing them. Some shots were fired and the police were compelled to return the fire, by which two strikers were killed. Several other collisions occurred during the evening. The strikers looted liquor stores and many other establishments. Comparative quiet was restored, however, by 1 p. m. On the morning of January 28 bands of strikers reappeared. The troops showed a peaceful attitude and disturbances began, professional thieves and hooligans joining the ranks of the paraders. The telephone kiosks were closed and all vehicles stopped. Many carts were looted and lamps broken. The crowds grew In numbers and the disorder was so great that the military were unable to cope, with them Houses and shops were set on fire and pillaged, but finally the troops dispersed the rioters by force of arms. The crowds in some instances were well armed and fired volleys at the troops. Barricades were erected in the streets by the strikers, who, thus protected, discharged fusilades at the soldiers in separate quarters of , the city and it was necessary for the troops to retaliate in Kid. , After sunset the rioting which had LEGISLATOR STIRS UP TROUBLE. been temporarily suspended,, was rein the side streets, in Warm Time May Result From Speech sumed some cases the only illuminaDelivered to Students. tions being from small fires built An upheaval in the Illinois legislain the middle of the street Notices the recent which had been posted warning the ture, possibly rivaling boodling exposures in the legislature rioters to return home were torn down of Missouri, may he the outcome of and processions of strikers .went from honse to house and from shop to shop, an address made by Representative accompanied by women and children Frank D. Comerford of Chicago to the carrying the sacks in which the loot Btudents of the Illinois college of law was placed. During the course of January 29 the strike extended. This recently. official report, which evidently was The general assembly has appointed a committee of seven to investigate written early on January 30, says that Mr. Comerfords charges, which are day there was evidence of returning quiet, some of the strikers resuming reported as specifically alleging "that work. the Illinois legislature is a great public auction, where special privileges ADDER FOR ACTRESS. are sold to the highest corporation bidders, and that, without respect tc Sent In Box s of Evidently to party affiliations the grafters seem Poison Her. to be in the majority. Fraulein Reubke of the court theaLegislative Scandal in California. ter at Munich, Bavaria, who is playAs an outcome of the bribery scan-ia- l ing the juvenile lead In Hauptmann's In the California legislature, Jofound on her dressing Bergschmlede seph S. Jordan, the alleged agent of table a beautiful box with a the accused senator, has been arrest- note her to open the box requesting ed and formally charged with felony. before going on the stage. The specific charge is that he obtained The actress was too much occupied $1,650 from George N. Tichenor on to do so until before the last act, and the representation that he would im- when she did open it an adder darted properly influence the action and out and fastened its fangs on her votes of Senators Bunkers, French, dress. Fraulin Reubke screamed and Wright and Emmons in the investi- fell in a and the attendants gation of building and loan societies. killed the faint, adder. After some delay The four senators are being tried bethe actress was able to finish the perfore the senate. formance. Indictment Returned Against Senator Mitchell and State Senator Brownell. Interest in the Oregon land fraud cases was again raised to fever heat by the announcement that the Federal grand jury at Portland had, on Wednesday, indicted United States Senator John 1IS Mitchell on another charge of bribery, and had also indicted State Senator George C. Brownell, one of the foremost Republican politicians and lawyers in this state on charges of subornation of perjury. This indictment against Mr. Mitchell alleges that while a senator from this state to the Federal congress he accepted on seven different occasions sums of money aggregating $4,200 named from a timber land dealer, Frederick R. Kribs, for services rendered in, It Is alleged, Inducing Congressman Binger Hermann, the commissioner of the general land office at Washington, to expedite, make special and approve certain applications for public lands, and recommend the issuing of patents to the lands. The indictment against Senator Brownell charges that Mr. Brownell zaused Fred Sievers and John Howland to swear falsely that certain field notes in connection with the survey of public lands in eastern Oregon were true. Bon-Bon- bon-bo- Crashes Into Sleigh, Killing Seven of the Occupants. A passenger train on the Pittsburg, Sh.iwinut & Northern railroad crashed Into a sleigh containing thirteen women, killing seven outright and so seriously injuring the remaining six that three of them died after removal to the hospital. Of the other three, two are in a serious condition. The accident occurred near Arkport, N. Y. The sleigh was one of three carrying a party from- the Universalist church of Hornellsville, N. Y. Train No Man Safe in Colorado. n PLOT TO SHIP ARMS. Revolutionists But General Suffrage of Russians Will Not Be Considered by Czar. There has been a partial suppression of disorder in Warsaw and traffic has been restored so far as to permit the arrival of some supplies of food. Murderous attacks on Individual soldiers, however, are reported to he In other industrial more frequent. renters, including Moscow and St. Petersburg, the strike is practically at an end. Grand Duke Vladimir, in the course of an interview, intimated that the people of Russia would soon be given a measure of representative government, although he declared that anything like general suffrage was not to be considered. The committee of ministers discusshas pubing the proposed reforms lished a report with the purpose of showing the people that the plans outlined in the imperial decree of December 26 are being carefully consid- ered. An unconfirmed report is in circu- lation that it has been officially ascertained that the discharge of grape from a saluting gun during the ceremony of the blessing of the waters on January 19. and which imperiled the lives of the emperor and members of his family, was a deliberate act of the terrorists, their tool being a private soldier of the saluting battery. OREGON SENATOR INDICTED. Grand Jury Makes Charges Against Senator Mitchell. ACT LIKE LUNATICS. Bluebeard Hoch Denies His Guilt. Johann Hoch of Chicago, who was arrested in New York City charged with bigamy and wife abandonment after a search extending over the entire country, told the officials at police headquarters on Tuesday that he is anxious to return to Chicago at once. He 'wanted to face the charges against him in that city, he said, and has no intention of opposing extradition. Hoch was photographed for the rogues gallery before being taken to In Guatemala Are Preparing for Trouble. Felipe Galicia, consul general at San Francisco for Guatemala, has notified the customs collector at that port that he has been warned of plots to ship arms and munitions of war from there to Tonala, Salina Cruz, and San Benito, Mexico, from which points It was intended to reship them across the Mexican border for the use of revolutionists in Guatemala. court Takes After Her Mamma. The runaway marriage of Lillian Russells daughter, Dorothy, has ended in the divorce courts. In a petition filed in the court in Chicago on Wednesday, Abbot L Einstein, the husband, is charged with being extravagant, lazy and brutal. He refuses to work, and I am compelled to support him Is one complaint of the petitioner. Fail.ng to get money from his wife, it is declared Einstein took and $2,000 worth of her diamonds spent the proceeds in gambling. Kansans After Trusts. The Kansas senate has adopted the Noftslnger resolution, providing for ac investigation of all the corporations doing business in Kansas. This includes the packers. Standard Oil company and others. If any of the corporations are found to be overrating in opposition to the provisions of the anti-trulaw, legal proceedings will be brought at once. Speaker W. R. Stubbs of the house of representatives announces himself as favorable to the investigation. Thirty-siRussian refugees from Port Arthur were lost off the Miatao islands January 28, the junk in which they were passengers striking a rock. The Information is brought to Chefoo Four junks conby other refugees. taining refugees were cast ashore on the islands. Seventeen junks with refugees reached Chefoo Tuesday. The China Navigation companys steamer Chefoo picked up fifty refugees along the coast. Kaiser is Against Luxury. Upon Emperor Williams' request Struck Senator in the Face. Senator Daniel A. Campbell, the Republican leader in the Illinois senate was struck In the face by Rllley In the upper house Tuesday Immediately after adjournment. Much excitement followed, and two of Senator Campbells collegues. Mueller and Brown, and the reached for Rilley and ejected hir from the chamber and placed him up der arrest. Senator Campbell said t could give no reason for the assault Rllley says he has had grievance against Senator Campbell for a num bar of years. Monument to a Woman, What is said to be the first statute erected In honor of a woman physician in the United States has been unveiled In Fuller Memorial hall at the Art Institute In Chicago, when the friends of the late Dr. Mary Harris Thompson presented a portrait bust of her to the institute. Dr. Thompson was the founder, in 1865, of the Mary Thompson hospital for women and children, and was the pioneer woman The physician of the northwest memorial cost $2,250 and Is the work of Daniel C. French. , equestrian festival IT." Total Products of the Soil Reach an Enormous Sum. The farmers of the United States are our greatest benefactors. In 1904, for example, our farm products were worth in the aggregate $4,900,000,000, an increase of 31.2 per cent over 1899. The sum is three times the gross earnings of all our railways and six times are amount of the capital stock of all the national banks. The corn crop would pay the national debt. Next to corn comes cotton, worth this year to$600,000,000, while hay and wheat of corn. gether about equal the value1,000,000,-000 The rice crop reaches nearly 000 pounds 200,000, being pounds, more than ever before. The secretary of agriculture becomes impressive, however, when he tells us that the patriotic hens of the country in one month lay eggs enough to pay a years interest on the public debt. The farmer Is said to be prospering this year beyond the record. To prove this the secretary shows that in the three distinctively agricultural states of Iowa, Kansas and Mississippi the depostis in all kinds of hanks increased in the eight years from June 30, 1896, to October 31, 1904, by, respectively 164, 219 and 301 per cent. During the same period the deposits in all banks of the United States as a whole increased by 91 per cent. Baltimore Sun. LOSES A LEG DELIBERATELY. Man Who Recovered $3,000 Damages Writes Confession to Company. A remarkable case has been brought to the attention of the manager of the Texas & Pacific railroad by a letter which he has received from W. L. Maring of Marcelire, who lost a leg by being run over by a train while employed on that road as a brakeman. He was paid $3,000 by the company in settlement of the injruy. Marings j QUEER TRAITS OF ANIMALS. Strong Fear of Some Brother Quadruped. Smoking a clay pipe, the circus act- or sat in the winter training quarters. Under his supervision a thin boy was learning to ride erect on a quiet horse with a broad, flat back. In some towns they wont let us show, said the man, unless we have no camels with us. Camels are a serious drawback to shows. Horses are so much afraid of them that lots of towns wont let a camel enter their All Havs gates. A horse wont go near a piece ot ground a camel has stood on. The very smell of a camel in the air will make a horse tremble and sweat. And this fear isnt only found occasionally in a horse here and there. It Is found in every horse all over the world. Queer, isnt it? I often wonder why it is. Cattle hate dogs In the same way and cats hate dogs so, too. Here, though we can account for the hatred. Dogs, in primitive times, fed on calves, no doubt, and even today, here and there, they kill and feed on J kittens. . Horses love dogs. Im sure I dont know why. Dogs fear no animals but You can take a pumas and leopards. dog up to a lions or a tigers cage and he will show no fear, but take him up to the cage of a puma or a leopard and he will tremble and moan and slink away out of sight All very puzzling, isnt it? ANGLERS SEEK THE KINGFISH. Annual Feature of Sport in California Waters. During the last few years there has been no phase of local fishing more to be depended upon than the annual winter run of these imitation yellow-finand rodsters have, therefore, come to regard them as an annual fixture, due to appear any time between the middle of December and New Years. Last winter the first big catches were made about Christmas, when HaiVy Slotterbeck and other exd perts caught several hundred kingfish in San Pedrb bay, and this season, punctual as the clock, the run has returned. Kingfish are not the most delicate ot local marine products, nor are they worthy representatives of the croaker tribe as fighters when on the hook, but they have good points, and not the least of these is their almost incredible voracity, which often enables the veriest tyro to catch them three at a time. Los Angeles Times. good-size- Japanese Love of Country. There are many instances in Japan of soldiers who have loved their country more passionately even than their families. Americans may think it horrible and incredible, but Japanese women understand the intense feeling of loyalty which predominates above in soldiers hearts. In the This petition was laid before Mr. everything interior of Japan a young farmer on whose spokes- the outbreak of war was Quay by a delegation, suddenly and called to man was insufferably the colors. Two days preptedious. The man talked to the senaaration was given him to settle his aftor nearly an hour. Every one stood fairs and to start for Tokyo. His wife seemed that had a during his speech, and it infant. The young very joung It would never end. mother was so overcome with grief When, finally, it did end, Mr. Quay at this unexpected hews that she faintasked wearily if there were any fured away and within an hour died, leavther reasons for the granting of the ing her husband alone with the newpetition that the delegates had to of- born babe. What could he do with it? fer. Who could care for such a mite? Penrose, tall, and straight and Feeling that his own life was forfeited low a in said and smiled boyish, to his country the poor man in a voice: of passionate grief killed his frenzy If you dont grant It, sir, well own child. Of course the law had to have that speech repeated all over step In and he had to be tried for murto you. again der. A merciful jury acquitted him on the ground of emotional Insanity. A Woman Policeman. Another calling which has oeen The Golden opened to women is that of an officer Mv mother has no goldLegacy. to share, of the law, though It is doubtful if Nor land, nor nerd, nor merchandise has her brother silken sex enter of (My the this hair, many gentler has her azure eyes!) new field. The city of Honolulu has ToMymesister she left no comeliness That to the foim or face belong, a woman filling this position, and she oh. one gift I do possess. is not only young and pretty but But The blessed heritage of song! Helen Is Miss She Wilder, wealthy. long ago In cradle days and her father is one of the great Long, Her sweet voice would my heart besevguile. sugar kings of the Pacific, worth I could nothing do but gaze eral millions. It was her love of chil- When Into the heaven of her smile! dren and animals which caused this I karned the songs in later years And with her sang them oer and to seek young woman of twenty-fou- r o'er Oh. a is She mounted this appointment. memory, thy lute and tears Must meet and mingle evermore! officer and wears on her soft felt hat the silver badge of her calling. She Twas 'Hush, my babe as fades the light carries a revolver. Not long ago this I hear her softly, sweetlv croon unusual young woman found that the Then Afton Water. "Stilly Night, and "Silver Moon": captain of a vessel which had lately She"Sanctissima, sang them with such tender art The art that only mothers know; put into port had for some slight of- And tied the tunes around my heart fense locked his two little girls in a Klse it had broken long ago! cabin and kept them on bread and Clarence Urmy in Lippincott's. water for three days. Alone she went aboard the vessel and ordered the Money, but No Friends. J. Arthur Josephs, one of the wits of ruffian ashore, where he was duly punished. the financial, center, was approached charthe other day by a In Winter Days. acter about the street, who plainThe days have lost thrtr brightness and I tively put to him this question: feel the dreary pain Of the winds that sigh around me of Josephs, would you lend five dollars the blooming hilght, to a friend in distress? I have but remembered roses, and the I would In a minute, responded songs of birds that seem " To be singing to me ever ip the meadows Josephs, but I havent got of a dream! Dont tell me that you havent got I say, somewhere the gardens of the It, interrupted the Other. I saw you sprtng are blooming bright, And morn tug dawns in splendor and the change a ten dollar bill just now in light the night, Eberlins. But the flowers I loved are ashes, and no You did not permit me to finish my altar-fire- s gleam Where my soul is ever sighing for the sentence, said Joseph Icily. What meadows of a dream! , I started to say was that I havent The dim days have no pity no promise got a friend in the world. New York for the years The stars are stormed from heaven and Times. the clouds rain down their tears! For a face that made the morning has His Awful Threat. faded with its beam. And the promise of the springtime is the Richardson of TenRepresentative of a dream! shadow nessee tells of the financial straits of Atlanta Constitution. a man in that state who, saddled with a large and unproductive farm, was Another Edition. Where have you been until this compelled to add to his slender relate hour? asked the wife of a liter- sources by taking up the practice of ary man, when he came home in the law In Memphis. wee small hours. During a tour of Inspection the was one day making of Oh, Ive been sitting up with a sick farmer-lawye- r friend, replied the man, hanging his his white elephant, he was maddened to the point of frenzy by chancing to hat on the gas jet. If any one should ark you, dear, run across several of his field bands dont forget to tell them that that is ealmly resting under a tree singing edition of that particular away for dear life. the forty-fifthe Here, you black rascals! piece of your fiction. shouted, shaking his fist at the culprits, get back to work this Instant! Hobby Is Collection of Watches. The famous Australian novelist, The first thing you darkeys know Ill quit the law and let you all starve! Mme. Mary von one of the finest collections possesses Island Disintegrates. of watches. A number of these timeGerman experts are becoming pieces are over 200 years old and alarmed at the rapidity with which the many of them are set In diamonds. The collection is said to be worth over cherished Island of Heligoland Is disintegrating. The sea does some harm, $50,000. but not nearly so much as rain, heat, frost and melting snow. An attempt Gibraltar Docks. Is to be made to check the damage The new docks in Gibraltar are means of pipes for catching tha by large enough to hold the biggest ves- water. ' sel In the British navy. long-winde- Men Smash Dishes, Attack Landlord and Almost Demolish Building. Fourteen boarders in the Commercial hotel at Floriston, Cal., which Is owned by the Floriston Pulp & Paper company, became boisterous while eating, and began throwing dishes at one another. Manager Glenn of the place told them to quit and they threw hint from a second story window, injuring him seriously. Then they tore the carpets from the floors and with the stoves and other articles of furniture threw them Into the street. They raided the barroom, breaking the fixtures and carrying away the liquor. They destroyed the billiard tables and broke every window in the house. Enraged citizens drove them from the building, but the rioters then rushed up the mountain and hurled large rocks down the mountain side nearly demolishing the house. Twelve of the men have been arrested and taken to Truckee, Cal. Four escaped. Convict Hangs Himself. Convict John H. Wood, who took a prominent part in the Folsom, Cal., prison break in July, 1903, committed suicide Tuesday. He was recently convicted of the murder of Militiaman Rutherford, whom he shot and killed during the famous man hunt Wood has been confined In the row of condemned cells and when seen by th turnkey at 10 a. m., was all right. When the 'turnkey entered the cell in the afternoon Wood was found hanging from tha ventilator. planned by aristocratic society of Berlin has been given up. The Duke of Ratlbor and General Von Plessen had asked the emperor to become a patron of the entertainment, which was to include a tilting tournament by knights in armor. The costumes especially were to be of so rich a character that the Emperor thought it would be too expensive for the officers participating. He Is endeavoring to lessen luxury In the army IN batch of four indictments, containing accusations against seventeen persons in all, was returned Tuesday reads: by the Federal grand jury at Portland, letter Four years ago I worked for the Ore., in the land frauds cases. Three Texas & Pacific and at that time I of them were made public, but the was a bad man, reckless, careless and fourth was witheld, pending the ar- had no respect for God or man. While rest ot the indicted persons, including under the influence of liquor I purboth Senator John H. Mitchell and posely lost my leg. But recently God Congressman Binger Hermann, thl has saved me, and my hope of heaven only two named who are of more than Is sure. I want to make this confession, as local prominence, have been indicted the good book requires ns to do. I before on practically the same charges. have spent this money that I have reThe indictment which mentions ceived from you and am willing to Messrs. Mitchell and Hermann names submit to anything that you should ten others. It charges conspiracy to think just. defraud the government of public land. A Strong Inducement Mr. Mitchell is specifically charged Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania with having prepared affidavits at celebrated his birthday recently In Washington to be signed by S. A. D. A Philadelphian, during Puter and Mrs. Watson: also with Philadelphia. a congratulatory call, said of him: inabetted the having conspiracy by I remember Penroses entrance into troducing Puter as a prominent citi- politics, when he was a boy of 24. zen of Oregon, and, lastly, with hav- He won the liking of Senator Quay ing accepted an alleged bribe of $2,000 by a quaint little speech that he made to the Republican leader during the from Puter. presentation of a petition. A Curtailment of the powers of the governor ot Colorado is the demand of 18,000 members of organized labor embodied In a petition from the Denver Trades and Labor assembly presented to the legislature. Under the construction of the supreme court on the question of habeas corpus, says the petition, "no man is safe. With the petition is presented the draft of two constitutional amendments providing for ceiling out militia and regarding buspebS'on of habeas corpus. the FARMERS ARE Actress Fatally Burned. As the audience in a Cincinnati theater awaited the appearance of Mamie Hayburn, a concert singer, she rushed out of her dressing room, a living torch, and ran screaming through the theatre. Several men threw coats over her and a pail of water finally put out the flames, but the singer, burned from head to foot and suffering horribly, is dying in a hospital today. Only the prompt action by men In thq theatre prevented a dangerous panic. Russian Refugees Go Down in icy Water. Thirty-si- x x well-know- love-sta- rs h Ebner-Eschenbac- |