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Show Ju i ' i ROBCERS HOLD UP PASSENGER TRAIN. FIVE MASKED - THE WEEKLY SENTINEL (UT TOCKTO. .... YIGILAKTKS CO.NTKOL BwMI! JAEBMAK, CTM A last coyote was captured in Lertei la the heart of Ogden, one daj week. Life insurance companies paid oa ein the state ol 1572. 200 in tndcinriit -. Utah last year There were exactly three times as many births as deaths in Salt Lake City during .the past month. A telegraph station will soon be ea tablished at Elgin. twenty miles west route from Cnliente, on the Salt Harland Loofbourow of Salt Lakt City, while driving a fractious horse was struck by a street car and bus tained serious injuries. It is claimed that ;wlthin seven months trains will be running ovei the entire Salt Lake route between Balt City and San Pedro The allotment of $72,000 made by tbe quartermaster's department for Improvements at Fort Douglas ha been approved by Secretary TafL The freak collect ion at the World's fair Includes a feathered freak from Salt I.ake, a web footed rooster, a creature seemingly half duck and half rooster. During the month of May only fifty-livcases of contagious and Infectious diseases were reiwirted in Salt Lake City, as against 144 for the previous mouth. Thomas W. Belllston of Salt Lake City is dead from injuries received 4n the Oregon Short Line yards In Salt Lake City, where he was struck by a moving train. Charles Botha will not be executed for shooting and killing his wife and William Tibbetts, the state board of pardons having commuted his sentence to life imprisonment Ore and bullion settlements in the Salt Lake market during the month of May were the heaviest of any month in the present year, the total cutting very close to the $2,000,000 notch. During an altercation at West Westabbed McFarland Daniel ber, Amassa Hammon with a pocket knife, Inflicting Injuries that may prove fatal, Both young men are numbers of prominent fsqpilies. The copper smelters owned by individual companies in the Salt Lake valley made a great record during r May, their production of bullion passing well over the mark. 8,500, State Treasurer J. D Dixon's report for of receipts and disbursements ot on hand balance a shows May $215,990.90. April 30 there was In the treasury. The May ree copper-gold-silve- 000-poun-d $245,-124.7- ceipts w're Th 6 $119,011.70. Word has been received In Ogden of the death of A. S. Messer in Massachusetts. Messer was one of the first ever employed on the conductors ran Union Pacific out of Ogden, the first train into Wasatch. A. M. Bruce, a brakeman, was knocked from a Union Pacific train In Weber canyon, near Ogden, and received Injuries which will probably prove fatal. His head struck a bridge and he was thrown into the river. The olty council has completed the knocking out of trading 6tamps In was An ordinance put Ogden. through which imposes a license oi $300 on each trading stamp concern and $600 upon each merchant using the stamps A movement known as the "Chris tlon crusade has been Inaugurated with western headquarters In Salt while Lake City. The 'movement, is thoran one, Independent strictly ol work In the with harmony oughly the churches. The weekly crop bulletin show-fthat winter wheat is beginning tc bead, spring grain is coming to good stands, and luoern Is starting ts bloom, while sugar beets are in fine condition. Pastures are gmd ana stock is thriving The secretary of the treasury will formally notify coBeetors of customs In the United Stales that Salt Lak City is now' a port of delivery and imported goods can be shipped on landing from abroad for appraisement at Salt Lake. Richfield Mrs. Sarah Hansen of suffered a painful accident las week, when a kettle of boiling watbr was overturned upon her. one of her feet being so badly scalded that portions of the flesh were ready to drop off when her shoe was removed. During the month of May Salt Lake county paid out $1,556.25 in assisting Indigent persons. Altogether 250 families, consisting of 738 persons, received aid. The average amount en to each family was $6 25 and the hverage o each person $2 11. Mr son of Carl, the esnarrow a had Sherec of Provo, cape from drowning. He fell into th factory race,' now running full, and was carried about fifty feet, when h waa discovered and rescued by William Foote. 5, leaver, ip train No. was held . ' REIGN OF TERROR IN COLORADO NKYS SUM.MARY. Six persons were killed and a doze car Injured as the result of a stiut Riot Occur in Victor, in Which Twenty Men Are Shot, an Innocent Spectator Being Killed by Stray Street An Infernal Machine la Exploded In Cripple Creek District, a Number f Workmen Being Non-Unio- n I Rioting broke out in Victor, Colo, merely an Infernal Monday afternoon while a mass meett!reu killing ing was being held to discus the murminers by mean of r,.i severely wounding der of eleten m-at Independence machine Infernal an of whom has nine since (in others, d namited. exgrt m sab vliMi Colo Monday. Forty shots were fired into a crowd In w i ci Led by died, at litdepen i iti w Tin. One man was killed and lei lie- n liters wire forced Moat oWkr hi!;,, l ami Injured were the street. Secreix persons, at least, injured. on the ni'tiw employed tiefere to take in lailln lilt. Ill, they C. Mine of Hamlin the t Clarence . mine. tary eculd gati.tr up He u,i:ali:t-.- in the nlfbt shift of tie Findley a 2 m. a. Owners' men at had association, The work concluding quit car I want to hear said: short board tbe were to address, and H When he tram wii.ung point three tunes west ot Farit hute Tues- suburban train on the Florence A what the hoys in the mines have got d men r raw led Cripple Cret s railroad and return to to sav about this trouble." day nigh' two William Hoskins, & union miner over ilie nder d Hie engine They their borne m Cripple Creek and Vicml. i s bn the head ot tor. Just after the engineer of the from Goldflela, threw up hi hand and placed si v tra-blew his whistle as shouted: Let me talk aim Ins fireman and approaching Engineer Alii-wAt this the crowd began to his Hosdemanded tlial in- ti.nn tm slopped. a Signal to Hie tinners, according to A Three men wen waning on tbe ten- enstom. a terrific explosion occurred kins and cry. Put him out. befollowed Hie on and and underneath fight shooting platform depot der and as tin train stopped they men Most were were of the which shots directed twenity-siear gan. ran hack um ou anti led tbs quu kly Hoskins fell with a bullet fathered skyward expr- ss ami baggage t ars These ears, - in his wa and the crowd scattered In blown Into Tbe spltntbody platform with lie t I'gine wen- inn Iwo mile Secretary Hamlib, irs, the depot was wrecked and a hole every direction furl lit we-- t t ,n cii cumference and who had been standing on a wagon, twenty six Tlie im inbi-iot ibe .it it crew wers About aV' itiv feet in depth was torn kept on talking unmindful of the ordeit-to remain with the pasenget Fragments of bodies hailstorm of bullets that whizzed coaches on pain ot being shot. Mes- In the grout, senger I) M Sheu id UeiiMr refused were bulled Hot, ugh space for sev- about his head R. McGee of Victor, who was Inand, later, were to open the i a i upon demand and eral hundii-Some of stantly killed, had been standing on picked up nil quiver ng the bodies droui into the pit made an embankment thirty feet above the hut heads, hands, men who had been fighting and was by the e,!,---,and trunks were an innocent spectator ears lei .up atrewn a ho t on all .soles Pieces of A dispatch from Denver says that tod on buildings 500 flesh were been infeet away ,a. Id od .tained every- Adjutant General Bell-hn- s formed a of Victor from by telephone fifty feet. thing w:H,ii riduis The foie. ,i r He f plosion was felt that an attack was made late Monday throne!,, an ran.p and the crash afternoon on Miners Union hall by ' i,'v The approuch-'oppe- a squad of sold ers awakened Major Naylor w and tho train sent guards to aid in quelling the distrain lng Pi n.en to reach tho turbance on Fourth street When the crew were scene of were uniformed men swung into Fourth They w in a by hundreds street they were fired upon from work was be- - houses on both sides of the street of per-ot- i,d gun at onei They returned the fire and raced on .it (,1.1-t- l Juncttun That th. i.t I, t, lieal crime was at double quick until they were near When the ronheis saw that th i"-- . and deliberately Miners Union hall At that point the tram ctew utie utii.ng they fled to eareftillv b is now not the mob had sc&tton d and as the soldiers the moun'ams One ot them as lie perpetrate,! shadow ot a Two or three hun-- f halted several shots were fired at Jmnpel tun, tin- ixpiess tar grubbed , now dor wn exploded, them from the windows of the hall lion-,dred one scaled nag which had been blown tto'ver attached to The doors of the building had been cirai' out ol the -- aitThis was the probahlv t it 1, wire tbe remains leading left open and a dozen guardsmen fired only pluudei winch was taken out from tl.i m of the explosion. into the hall as fast as they could woik WRECK NEWSPAPER PLANT. the mechanism (if their rifles Af'o-- a PEABODY SUSTAINED. few volIVys the order to ta'-the Armed Men Destroy Machinery and v tin and was assault by State given Supreme Court Says He Ha place Order Workmen to Leave Victor. Genwas In. to It reiiorted plunged to Union Men. Right Imprison A special from Victor, Coio., says The state supreme court of Colo- eral Boll that a number of men were unknown armed showith eight men, rado has refused the application for killed, but none of the guardsmen tgun, rifibs, pisltil dud sledge were Injured. enterd the office of the Victor a writ of habeas corpus for Charles Monday' outburst had Its incepH. of the Western Moyer, president Record at 11.45 o'clock VVedresday in the strike of the members of tion night, ordered the men to throw up Federation of Miners, who Is held as the Western Federation of Miners their hands, broke up the machinery a military prisoner at Telluride, by something more than a year ago, of Governor James H. Peabody order and then told the men to get out of work for tho when 4.000 men The governor's action In declaring purpose, primarily,quit of the district as last as they could. enforcing an Th-action so inday There is no t hit-- at the piesent time, martial hvw in Sun Miguel county, im- eight-houprisoning Mi ver and other union men censed the mine owners that they deto the identity ol tin- men. on thp ground that they had Incitcal clared a war oil unionism, and tho George Kyuer. proprietor of tho breach has grown wider with the pasInsurrection ami rshelhon suspendsage of time Considerable lawlesspaper, was at lunch and Foietnan Waltci Sweet was in t barge of the ing the writ of habeas corpus and Ig- ness has prevailed in the strike-riddeHeuithority of the local districts, and unionists have been men. They wen- husitv engaged in noring to trial on numerous charge.-Theas courts necessary to him in broughtwere Ini mm mug paper when getting out invariably acqu tted, howlaw Is susand order ever. suddenly eight heavily armed men maintaining tained. BLOWN INTO ETERNITY. opened t lie ti out dot r and waikiil According to the decision the govhack to the composing room They ernor has sole power to determine Death Dealing Explosion n Distillery threw their guns on the, startled men a state of insurrection exists when at Peoria, Illinois. who were at work and one, who waa In any county of the district. The men were Killed, six fujiued. Ten evidently the leader called out: "I.lc courts have no power to interfere 3OJI00 barrels of w "now whisky destroyed and thri up up your hand" with his exercise of this prerogative and 3,200 Tattle burned to death in The men obeyed qnickiv The men The governor has the right to uso an then wretked two linotype machines, explosion at the plant of the Corn forces of the state to the military several Job presses and all the equiping Distillery company at Peoria Ills uppress insurrection. ment of the office They smashed the Saturday afterpoon shnrt.v after 4 He has also Use power to order the o'clock. The immense warehouse in When telephone and a typewriter and killing of Insurrec- which the their work of rum was completed they Imprisonment explosion occurred was tionists If in his opinion that exand three other marched the Record employes out on destroyed, completely tremity 1 necessary. the sidewalk and ft id them to get out He can detain military prisoners buildings were gutted by the flames. $1,000,-00of town The Ret ord has been known until he decides that the insurrection The property loss aggregate so far. It is thought that the death as the organ of the Western Federa- la quelled. TTie courts of the state have no list will be increased. The tion of Miners in this section. Corning right to Interfere with the military DtsUllerar plant is the second largest authorities and their handling of AGAIN UNDER MARTIAL LAW. in the world. prisoners. General Bell Will Rule in Cripple Creek Mining District. Tel.er county is once more under martial law and the military is in su prente command. Adjutant General Sherman M Bell and staff arrived in Victor early Wednesday and inimediately .promulgated military rule by posting on tho door rf the annorv. where a large number of union men i and sympathizers are imprisoned. Acting Governor Warren A. Baggett's proclamation. Declaration of military rule ha aleffect All facready had a tions In the camp are tired of the contn versy and are planning a settlement. That the union miners who went on strike August ju, 1903, would be glad to bury the hhtchet is shown by the publication of a editorial In the Victor Record, the mouthpiece cf the West- ern Federation of Miners, urging that the strike be called ofT. The Czar commander at Port Art hur are between two fire. A conceded pulling a machine, by w:e exj' lo.tft'd non-unio- non-unio- n iiid-ke- - free-for-a- , I 1 t I - t I d i - ; i . How the Riot Started. The sentiment of the Mine Owners, a voiced bv C C Hamlin, secretary of the association, la that all union miners must be driven out of he camp His declaration that the time had come to "purge the distrlrt' Started the rioting at the mass meeting In Victor, called to discuss the dynamite outrage at Independence "It up to you to drive these scoundrels out, Hamlin had declared, whereupon Alf Miller, a union man who had been sworn In as deputy sheriff, raised' his rlfle and Inquired, "Whom are you referring to? Miller's rifle was seized and the shooting began which resulted In the killing of Roxy McGee. a miner, and the wounding of six other persons, one of whom, John Davis, also a miner, died a few hours later. The first shot was fired by some one In the crowd This was immediately by two rifle stints from windows of the Miners Union ball non-unio- non-unio- d SEA. i collision in Norwalk, O lOJM-fabout A lockout against teamand bricklayers, hodcarriers ster has begun at Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. Bertha Calhoun is supposed to ha- - perished in a fire which destroyed her Lome in Berkeley, C&L The last section ol the se ond cablw America and connecting Germany was completed dunng the night of June 1 In an expit sum at the plant of th B. F. Goodrich company at Akrou, O, hall a dozen persons were injured, some seriously. hav Russian naval contractor been advised that final preparation-fothe Baltic fleet must be compleh ed by the first week in August. Rt purls. U damage to floating craft xnd dm king facilities come from several port towns along tho southern Uaiitoinia coast, resulting from high r Bullet. Matacred. . on BY LAND AND jut .i.ci , : 1 ATTACKED I miles up r, live I,, i mil ii.ei itir.-. i at at ion mid-- i w yet of I 'are- to .i ' , ai. Jim turn and way bet wiin t ui.t- - staled bag G.euw sj-I was taken Hum the It Containing Fifteen baths have leulted from the dvnamite outrage ar Independence, Colo , and m vend of the injured are in a critical condition, and two men weie killed and eight wounded in the subsequent rioting In Victor A thoroughly organized vigilance commit tte. composed of mine owners and their employe., and sympathizers have taken Large of the government of Tellei county, and large squads of Hrmed men are patrolling the district. These men are ostensibly acting under oiders of Edward Bell the new thoriiT, who is a large property owher and an outspoken opponent of the Miner-.- ' union Sheriff Henry M Rob-- i m n resigned under compulsion Ho was forcibly talon to the headquarters of the .'I'li'1 Owners' association and h's demanded At first he tefiiKed to resign, but when a coil of rope was thrown at finally his fe.-- lie weal. lied and signed the resignation which tiad been prepared for li'pi Tl-first act of Sheriff Roll was to take away the star of Under Sheriff .1 K nobu'-- t on tie then appointed twenty fiyp deputies to which Imu-additions- have since hern made and later be dU, unied the union officers had been appninled bv City Mar.-lr--l O'Connell of Victor Meantime, O'Uorim 1! hail visile. the Aline wh-eOwners about f b rt v armed men had assembled and demanded that they surrender their Anns to him He was forcible elect rd and after being demised from of flee bv Mavor French lie was placed tinder arrest Many of Hie other regularly chosen peace officers of Hie various towns In the district also been dejiosed and some of them locked up with about 2nd union miners who were arrested after the rioting In Victor resl-natl- . lo Westl-ol.l.- t and Dynamite Safe, Brake-va- But Are Not Richly Regarded for Trouble. Recent Dynamite Outrage in Cripple Creek District Result in Number of City and County Officer Being Forced to Retign. UTAH STATU MAYS. jark, Shoot MINE OWNERS TAKING LAW INTO THEIR OWN HANDS. v I xv liuls. their final session at St Louis, Medico Isy chclogical as so. iatii n elcitcd San Antonio. Texas, as tin- pi.ii e in who h tc hold the next annual convention A tornado at Dallas, Tex, blew ths roof off tiie office of the Western Union Telegraph company and caused damage thi o.mhout the city. A far as known no one was hurt. H.cmio M.iiiiuoz and Simon Garcia, ranchmen Sanchez, New Mexico, in ul. seven victims are a ad. thus lar ot t!.-- poisoned water barrel in u;e at the Taioya h. me. A dispatch to the Ixvndon Time from Tangier says that Mohammed el Torres has appealed to the tribes to capture Raisuli, saying that this alon can gave Morocco from invasion. Frank Sessler, a rejected suitor, shot himself and Miss Lstella Roney, daughter of the assistant superintendent' of the South Chicago (shipyards. The girl will recover, he will die. The Missoun supi erne court lias decided that the state board of 'Srbitra-tiohad no power to punish witnesses for contempt who refuse to testify before it. This decision destroys the At the Aiio-iiia- - n law. to 157 tho Geora vote of lfif-instructed Democratic convention gia It delegates to the national convention to veto for the nomination of Judge A d on B. Parker of New York for president A compilation of new incorjiorations in the eastern states with a capital of $1 ,666,666 or more, shows that in May which they aggregated $132.iHJ0.bfl0, amount is largely below the totals ol 1903. 1902 and Iflbl. L dispatch from Muk den, says tbe Russian losses at thfi battle of Km Chou May 26 were thirty officers and Cfifi men killed or wounded The guns abandoned by the Russians were rendonsl useless The dead body of Herman S Petti-bone- . 31 years old. a sen of former A H Pottibone ot Congressman Tennessee, was found in a hotel at He had committed suiWashington cide by taking poison Postmaster Gencial Payne, as acting rhairman of the Republican national Cuiteo committee, ha-appi luted States Senator Penrose of Pennsjl-vania member of the committee tc sm coed the late Senator Quay. Two military prisoners at Fori Snelling made an attempt to escape and one of them, named Wtsch. was shot dead. Wisch. who has sever times been convicted of violatitn ol rules, belongs to the fie d artilerj The foreign office doubts he correct nes of a Constantinople dispatch published in Paris, saying that the ccnsuij unite In reporting that S.OflO Armenians were massacred during the Accent conflict between Turks and Armenians. The Echo de Paris St Petersburg correspondent reaffirms his Intelli-gence- . that previously telegraphed, the czar, adopting Viceroy Alexieff views, ordered General Kuropatkin to send 40 000 men to the relief of Port Arthur. In the arrest of Michael Donovan, the Chicago police believe they have bev gun the disruption of an organized band of car thieves whose depredation In recent years have cost the railroads nearly $1.000 060. Dcnovaa has confessed A severe windstorm struck Glencoe. a town of 1.000, in Payne county, Okla.. demolishing five residences and destroying the Methodist church. Several persons were hurt, none seriously. Much damage was done to farm property. Continued heavy rains have swollen Farmera Are Heavy Losers. From Bank to Prison. all streams in Oklahoma and Indian All Kansas rivers, except the WalJ. E. Marcell, former cashier of the to the point of overflowing Kansas, bank, nut and the Verdigris, In the southern Territory wrecked Highland. and thousands of acres are under of in part the state, continue to fall. The year sentenced Jo thirty-fivwgter. Railway traffic Is threatened prison, five years on each of seven streams named are rising slowly, and counts of forgery, which is said to'vare driving families from fhe amounted to $2'fl.fi0d, has het-- lands around Arkansas City and at work a an apprentice tin- - feyville. Imt it is not believed that' Rut little der Emmett Dalton, tbe former out-- they can go much higher law. In the tailor shop at the Kansas rain is rejtorted for this part of th His health is pixir and southwest. As the waters subside th , penitentiary ,n 1aKt 5Par 8,1 mimpanies he was given Lghl work Marcell can-- i great amount of damage wrought be j out claim have j combined paid be paroled until he has served at comes apparent, the farmers being least eighteen years of his sentence, heavy losers. By . r , - semi-offici- y set-in- Japanese Make Another Assault Upon Port Arthur. Advices from Chefoo. tinder date of June 7, state that preceding a sea attack on Port Arthur the Japanese apparently made a determined effort to advance on that stronghold by land. A Chinese Junk which left a point three miles south of Port Dalny early Monday morning has arrived at Chefoo She reports having heard fighting north of Port Arthur from 7 oclock until 2 Monday morning o'clock that afternoon, by which time fhe passed out of hearing distance. It would appear that the Japanese planned a land ami sea attack on Port Arthur Tuesday. The Russians on femug Ihb sent th Ir fleet out to glvs battle. The result Is not known. France Ha Right In Morocso. Foreign Minister Delcasso gave before a committee of the French chamber of deputies a detailed explanar tion of the Anglo-Frencconvention. Being asked whether the agreement gave France the eventual right of or protecting the Moorish empire, M Delcassq said that he could not foresee the future All he could say that France had rights In Morocco which nohodv any longer contested apd that she was capable of making use of prerogative which all powers recognize without injuring the Interests of any. s Cannot Pa Through Dardanelles. A cable from London says The foreign office has npt yet received any request from Russia or Turkey to agree to the passage of the Russian Black sea fleet through the Dardanelles. It Is pointed out that Turkey doubtless would be delighted to get rid of the Russian Black sea fleet, but the passage of warships through the Dardanelles would be a distinct contravention of the treaty, permission ftyr which has not been asked nor la likely to be granted if, asked for. An Impression prevails , at Chefoo , 0 two-colum- Aother Revolution in Santo Domingo. Within three days of Admiral Sigs-bee'-a announcement that peace had n promontory at the time did been concluded in Santo Domingo, not hear any firing, while reports anothet revolution has broken out fn come from Teng Chpw of heavy firing that country Minister Powell cabled ' being heard there. the state department on Wednesday . Two thousand men engaged in con from Port au Prince. Hayti. that "tle struction operations in North Hudson. British cruiser Indefatigable left that N. Y.. quit work Tuesday because of the refusal of the contractors to grant piace yesterday, it having been rea working day of nine hours The ported that General Jimine had efmen have been working ten hours fected a landing at Macoris. Teledally. The strikers are nearly all graph communication has been that a naval battle took place day night In the Gulf of Pechill. sengers on steamers passing the Italian. MonPas- Llao-tlesha- ' low-hav- e i 'v JL |