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Show , 1 t' . . . ,. : .. . 2J ; J . : f : , i V? i LOGAN CITY, UTAH, ,voi.VXXiv it be TUESDAY, tfEBBUAKY 10, 1903. He subject of Statehood; weat on to say thatt '4he question' ST. LOUIS SHAKEN. mere bugaboo which had was ibeeu brought in only for the pur' ' pose of delay. i V ; Mr. Spooner took issue with the Two Distinct Shocks of .Earthsalcc last statement- - and gorged. the imWilhin Five Minutes. r portance of the stdect-Wi- th roe it is not a trifling matter and i 'i i . ? Arises In U. S. v, Discussing Senate Wt Statehood Bill. - ( ' - - no BaerequestioTirr-ofdelaVand when we.;. are .fold ;here that the St7mt:.Quest Morrooii chnrch controls elections -- Somal dn .a State now In the Mexico Cover Union, I Revelation TeHer:BelievcTPrAcUcgTthiukwe ; mustjadmif that tEat to State was never prepared for ad . , Totallv Abolished. mission." He meant ito refer to that matter in the friture, and he hoped he would not be charged - . In.the with filibustering. .Washington, , Feb. ,7 Replying, Mr. Teller contended today Mr. Keau resumed that a few Mormons in Arizona remarks iu opposition to the would not be capable of control .Statehood bill. In thq course of ling elections there. So small a his remaps. Mr. Kean read from consideration, should ,uot, he eon? y took of travel to show that polyg-itro- tended, stand .in, the way ofj a -in the Mormon promise made in the treaty of DOW exists to admit as church, in the Republic, of Mexico, Guadalupe Hidalgo, States the territoiy acquired -- from and the fact wasTcommented upon Mexico, . by 'Messrs. Beveridge. .Spooner Mr, Spooner said that so long and J)?pew as going to show that as the bill had been pending Mr. the contention th a t poly gamy Teller was the first to break silence on. the Democratic side of had been .abolished is- not well Fist One Listed Twenty Fofceful to Rattle - :' founded. Mr..8pooner asked Mr Rawlins whether the revelation for aboli-tio- u had covered Mexico -- ' Mr. Kawlins referred Jiim to the doru-Bjeotsaying,4 that he (lid nut s, : Dishes and Swing St, Louis, Mo., Feb. 8. Two distinet earthquake shocks were felt u St. Louis and vicinity between i6:20 and 6:25 oclock tonight,' The first shock was of .almost twenty seconds duration and while it wus not so distinctly felt immediately in St. Louis and in the western subnrbantowns, and is Alton, Belleville, Edwards-vill- e and other nearby towns in Illiuois, it was sufficiently forceful to rattle dishea and swing doors. . The second shock followed withthe chamber. two aninutes and was slight and in Replying Mr. Teller said the re as wi why the Democrats had not of short duration. ' Both .shocks spoken was found the fact thatt were from northwest to southeast. they did i not want fo assist in the delay which lie believed had been S preconcerted prearranged ; and studiously followed by what he believed to be the minority in the 1 . put any construction upon 'but Mr. .Hoar remarked that "possibly the revelator had Senate. The Senate then went into not been able to speak Spanish." Ur. Kawlins added later that as exective session and at 4; SO p. ro, he recalled President Snows proc- adjonrued. care to them; lamation .forbidding polygamy, it had covered the Mormon chureh throughout he world, Mr. Depew read the proclamation to show that polygamy had and not only been snspended prohibited. He thoug&i another revelation from the Mormon church should be forthcoming. 1 Notice, Seventy-fou- r cases o smallpox hasnt even smiled since. Greatest The annnal banquet versity Seniors Friday evening was the-Un- i- the occasion of a series of kidnaping expeditions, in which the seuior and junior classed sought to abduct each others officers, with more or less success. ' There were several varieties of excitement as a result, and one frieudl.v scrimmage in front, of the Commercial club, where the banquet was beiug held was so intense that pedestrians became alarmed and sent iu a hurry call for the police. The policemeu however npon reaching the scene did not interfere in the mix-uwhich, despite its friendly nature, developed a series of black eyes and swolleu countenances. p, The holdup shot by officer Heath of the Salt Lake police force has been identified by Moses V, Reese, a miller employed at Mnrray, as William Wilson, a cousin of Reeves wife who visited them three days before the tragedy, appearing much depressed by recent ill for tune, and who proclaimed his. of doing something desperate .unless his lnck changed at once. Reeves said the dead mans wife, consin and fonr brothers live at Payson. The wife was iu Salt Lake and visited the morgue when her husbands body was there. It was she who attracted attention by kissing the dead mans brow. Reeves said ' Wilson bad borne a good reputation. in-teu- tion the are under qunrantinqin Salt Lake. Board of Trustees of ' the Logan i li ra stated that the..- - farmers of Irrigation District that a special Weber county are signing beet meeting of the landowners of said contracts more' readily than ever Logan Irrigation'District, is here- before. Kearns Speech by called for Wednesday tbe 11th Two more complaints have been Senator Kearns very interesting day of February, 1903, at the hoar sworn to .charging one of remarks on the Mormon question oclock, p. nj. of said day Arthur Brown with If the Senator wants an auadultery with during debate in the thoritative statement in the Senate at tbe Comity Court HAuse in Lo- Mrs. Aunie Bradley, upon Nov, 8, senate Thursdays in he may have all his dornbts re- - gan City, Cache "County, Utah. 1901 and Feb. were, full, as follows: 1, 1902. e 1 said to be moved next session when the next meeting subject pf Notice is hereby given by . ex-Seua- ter , Senator from Utah takes his remarked Mr. Bacon, "That, only replied Mr. Depew. is argument that I have heard for the admission of n Mormon to the Senate. Mr. Teller expressed the opinion that notwithstanding the declaration of the book quoted polygamy does not exist among the Mormons in Mexico. He did not be- lieve the people or priests of that country would tolerate tbe practice. He added it was his conviction James Dungan, who hails from doning further operations of said Chicago is in'jail in Salt Lake. He Irrigation District and of dissolv-th- e is believed to have knowledge ns to the identity of the holdups who tbe same, look part iu the Morrison and Thomas Tarbet, R. L. Martineau, Heath episodes.. Wra. Evans, Mrs. Annie Bradley and John Qua yle, Arthur Brown appeared ' A. P: Eliason; before Judge Diehl in Salt Lake, Board of Trustees! and each pleaded not guilty to Richard Yeates, three charges of adultery. Four Sec. lawyers represent the defense. Logan, Jan!! 31st, 1003, Burglars effected an entrance in to the home of a family named y Many cattle are dying of Mnnn in Salt Lake by dimbiDg tion and frost near Parowan. over the front door transom, and escaped safely with a quantity of silverware and jewelry. seat." to vote that the !qnestiouoL is entirely foreign to . - Nearby He Doors. 4 , i Towns Became Alarmed Sufficiently . . Second t It,,' t-- i -- k 4 - v r 77 G. S. Backman, a Salt Lake tinner, while dining with friends ONE THOUSAND. DIE at the Saddle Rock restaurant, was ednstraiued to give veut to a hearty mastilangh while endeavoring Number Swept Into the ' Sea cate a large, piece of beefsteak. That The- meat slipped down ' into his , By GlgantlcTldiilave. windpipe and he was black in the face and nearly dead before two hastiy summoned doctors "rushed in and removed the obstruction. Society Island tod Puamotu Group the on the proposition of abanf ex-Sena- tor - t starva-polygam- Applause from all sides of tbe house, including the outside. S L. Herald.. --Terrific- Sufferers-Way- e Hurricane of Food and Clothing. Accompanied by Survivor '.Destitute Sau Francisco, Feb. 8. News of a fearful loss of life in a destructive storm that swept over the South Sea islands last month reached hero today on the steamer Mariposa, direct from Tahiti. The loss of life js estimated at 100Q souls. On January 13th a huge tidaljvave.accompaniedbya terrL fle hurricane, attacked the Society islands and the Puamotu gronp withjearful force, causing deaths and devastation never before equaled in the land of dreaded storms, a verification of mans inability to contend with wind and sea. The storm reigned several days, reaching its maximum strength between January 14th and January lGtb. From the meager advices received at Tahiti up to the time of sailing on' the Mariposa it is estimated that at least 1000 of the islands inhabitants lost their lives. It is feared that later advices will add to the long list. The first news of the disaster arrived At Papeete, Tahiti, January 26th, on the schooner Eimeo. The captain of the schooner placed tbe fatalities at 500. t The steamer Excelsior arrived at vPaneete the following day with 400 destitute1 survivors, The captain of the Excelsior estimated the total loss of life to be 800. The figures com-- , prised only the deaths on the thre islands of Hao, Hikuera and Makor kan, whose ordinary population is 4 1800. . On Hikuera island, where 1000 inhabitants were engaged in pearl diving one half were drowned. On an adjacent island 100 more were washed out to sea. Makokau and Ilao are depopulated. Conservative estimates at Tahiti place, the number of islands visited by the tidal wave uud hurricane a eighty. All of them are nnder the control of the French Governor at Tahiti, The surviving inhabitants are left destitute of food, shelter and cloth- Did you see the fine Estey piano which jnst arrived and wTch was in the show window at the Harris Music Co? Well, its gone. They cant keep them. The Esteys are ing, all having beeu swept away4 sold as fast as they can arrive. by the storm. ' John Miller, an impecunious stranger who -- was snffering from pneumonia nnd applied for lodging at the jail in Ogden, succumbed to the disease and died without leaving word as to where his relatives might be found. of the Third , The three divisions court are so condistrict judicial from aside all gested that, probate cases, 1,500 cases await adjudication.' Thism?ans two years business unless the force1 of judges' is increased. James Williams, who represented himself as a cow puncher from Oregon, was arrested in Ogden for being hilariously drunk. As he had $500 in greenbacks on his person the arrest was a providential one for him.. He was allowed' to . depart in peace, Miss Lizzie Platt of ' Salt Lake 'vscjrS. , left the home of her parents vowStraus ing that she .would. never return, because they and her brothers and ERICAN MEMBERS OF THE . PERMANENT HAGUE ABI- - sisters were continually making fun of her red hair,. She refused TRATION .! TRIBUNAL. lnllHWp to go back even when taken to the from Delitf,18 c'e,in8'e' f tlio United Strxte9 Supreme court, Judge Gray is Lead of the coal arbitration commission, John W. Grigga attofUey ,rener j ot ,,re fjwl police station, and was allowed to United btatee, and Pscar S. Straua jg to Turkey. ' n go to the home of relatives. I K , MOROCCO8 PROGRESSIVE SULTAN AND HIS TROUBLES. AbJul Ail brought on the present revolution in Morocco, it is said, because he vra too progressive to suit his slow going people. Riding ft bievde, having his pictures taken and executing murderers of missionaries were among the offenses charged against him. I |