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Show JAKEJUR, PmbtkkMa AT UTAH STATE NEWS. Alma Johnson of Mantl was painful !y Injured by being thrown from a Lor one day last week The citizens of American Fork bave decided to have a rousing Fourth of July celebration. The real estate men of Ogden are to have an association similar to that of the real estate men of Balt Lake. Edwin Frost, a pioneer blacksmith of Salt Lake City, dropped dead while shoeing a horse, death being due to apoplexy. The regular summer school at the University of Utah opened Monday morning and continues for a period of six weeks. Arthur Milllkin of West Jordan, has disappeared, as has also the 14 year-ol- d sister of his wife, and if is said the couple have eloped. Fire destroyed the Rio Grande station at Green River, the loss being febout $2,000. Nothing of value In the station or office was destroyed. James M. Shockley, sentenced to be shot on June 24, will not be executed on that date, his attorneys having taken an appeal to the supreme court. Ore and bullion settlements In the Salt Lake market during the past week reached a total of $424,100, or $7,100 more than during the week previous. Independence day will be befitting-l- y celebrated In Mantl, the city council having appointed the committees who will make arrangements for a good programme. The Kaysviile city council has refused the Independent Telephone company a franchise in that town until they ay, tee to certain conditions stipulated by the council. Miss Ethele Seely of Mt. Pleasant, who has been attending the Chicago Musloal college the past season, received the gold medal former proficiency In a class of 200 pubtls. Mrs. W. L. Stoddard, a waitress in an Ogden restaurant, last week the Information that the had won the $10,000 cash prize recently offered by the San Francisco Weekly Examiner. Ogden wants the next encampment of the Utah National Guard. A petition Is now in circulation among the ' business "menTand has been freely signed, asking the Guard to come to Ogdea this summer. The report of contagious and infectious dlreases to the state board of health for the month of May received from seventy five local he' 1th officers in twenty comities, shows (HO cares and seventy-ondeaths Earl Gardner a Silt Lake youth, la-- t d a mn irom drew ring week ill Jordan river. Tie man Jumped in, evidently with Mi'cidal Intent. wti"i the young man promptly plung-n- l jn him out. after him and The preliminary hearing of Harry manMoss charred with vounfnry slaughter in the Lill'r; of William T7 Stone, in Ottdcn canyon, was held last week tied rt" tilted in Vims being bound oier in lumas of $1 500. Peter Johnson, need 2d, a native oi Richfield, net deth in a hoTiblo manner while veiling in the Chi'.nt, mills at He Lamar. Xt vad.n While attending to the feed lie fell into the mill, his body h'drig torn and mutilated in a horrible manner. Albert Doxey. the young man who attempted suicide near Willard, probably will recover. It is said that th trouble arose over a pirl. Doxey bad driven to the place to see the young woman, but she declined to go out with him. Mack McCullow shipped two carloads. sixty head, of horses from Lehl last week, to points east of the The horses were paid Mississippi. for at the rate of $7 per head. They were mavericks, wild from tho Rush valley ranges. A dispatch from Berlin, under date of June 17. says: In the second sec tion of the Womens congress today university study for women was die cusaed. Mrs. Alice Horne of the Utah legislature described the Art Work of Women In Utah Schools." Reese and Bass, who are now serving forty and thirty years respectively In the penitentiary for the murder of Fred McCabe at Ogden, are making a vigorous search, by advertisements. for two witnesses, who, they say, can prove their Innocence. A heavily loaded gravel car on the Salt Lake street railway got awa from the crew and crashed Into an other street car. cm the serious a Injury of Yr;-- . V.ary E Chinmnn, .All widow the pasergeri and the Jumped in time to save themseiver Iran irjurj Utahs fru t ex! 'I, t tn lie made at the World., filr on Urrii day, Orto ber Hi, wil fnrmle about n ton r.l setrl-tr!c tl fm ts frrn Uivie, rurh Is figs, grapes, pom rg-- s rites and al Inonds, and a Erg-- - qu ty cf ap pies, peaches and plums from othef .prtlon n the state. e d w fter , j , o ADOPTED pro-t-ctl- mi rrocrro. fulfilled. We propone to continu ttitai prtmiple. and we declare our ronatant adherence to th following prlndplee: Protictlon which guard and develops our Industries la s cardinal policy of the REPUBLICANS DECLARE THEIR Republican party?- The meaaure of POLICY FOR COMING ELECTION. should alway at least equal th d lTerence In the cost of production at home and at, road. We Inaiat epon ths Efforts to Regulate Trusts Approved, malnterarco of the principle of protection ard therefore rate of duty ahould Gold Standard Upheld, Protection be readjusted only wnen condition hay so changed that the public Interest deDeclared Cardinal Policy of the mands their alteration. Powerful Hut this work cannot he comNavy Party, mitted to any othtr hard safely than those of Advocated. the Republican party. To entruet tt to the Demo-rat- lc party ta to Invite dlaaa-te- r Whether aa tn 18S2 the Detnorratio The first day's proceedings of the partv declared the protective tariff unor whether It demands Republican National convention at constitutional, tarlfT reform or tariff revision, tt real Chicago, waa carried out like clock- object la alwavH the destruction of the eyatem. work, not a discordant note being protective However speelou the name, the purla ever th earn. A Democrat! sounded. An organization was per- pose tariff haa alwaye been followed by fected preparatory to the adoption of adversity; a Republican tariff by a platform and the making of nomi- business prosperity. To s Reogbliran congreea and s Republican president this nations in the succeeding days of the creat queetlon can be safely lntrueted. svhen the onlv free trad country among convention. the great nation agitated s return to The keynote to the campaign of oroteetlon tha chief protective country should not falter In maintaining It 1904 was Bounded by Elihu Root In We have extended widely our foreign his speech as temporary chairman. markets and we believe tn the ndoptlon of all practicable methods for thetr furHis address wag a review of the ac- ther extension. Including commercial recarrange-mereciprocal complishments of the present admin- iprocitycan wherever he effected consistent with the istration and a defense of Republican nrtpoiples of protection and without a rrlciilture. American to Ame-tca- h policies In general. 'When that had luhor or nov American Industry. We heUrve It to he the duty of the Rebeen delivered and the various workto irnhold tho gold standpartv publican ing committees dispatched to their la- ard and the Integrity and value of our bors the business of the session national currency The maintenance of the gold standard, established by the was completed. Retmtdlcan partv. capnot safety be commut'd to th- - Democratic party, which Speaker Joseph G. Cannon waa the resisted Its ndoptlon and ha nevef given central figure at the second day's ses- anv proof since that time of belief In It or to It. sion of the Republican National cond While rverv other Industry haa under the fostering aid of Repubvention. lican leg' ltlon. American shinning enFrom the standpoint of political im- gaged In foreign trade In competition construction, low portance the adoption of the party with theandtow coat of wages heavy auhaldlea of foreign platform was the event of the day. It governments, haa not for many years refrom the government of the Unitcontained declarations of party policy ceived ed States adequate encouragement of any that are to form the basis of much of kind We therefore favor legislation will encourage and build up the the oratory In the coming campaign. which American merchant marine and we approve the legislation of the last REPUIlLICAN PLATFORM. congress which created the merchant Following la the platform adopted by marine commission to Investigate and the Republican national convention: report upon thle subject. A navv powerful enough- to defend the Fifty year ago the Republican party Lnlted States against any attack, to upcame Into existence dedicated among hold the Monroe doctrine and watch other purpose to the great task of ar- over our commerce la esaentlwi to th resting the extension of hnmftn slavery. safety and the welfare of the American In 1860 it elected Its first president. Dur- neople. To maintain auoh a navy Is the of the forty-fou- r ing twenty-fou- r year fixed policy of the Republican party. Which have Happed nine the election of We cordially approve the attitude of Lincoln, the Republican party hit held President Roosevelt and congrtee In recomplete control of the gowrnment. For gard to the exclusion of Chines labor eighteen more of the forty-fou- r e.irs and promise a continuance of the Reft ha hchl partial control through the publican policy In that direction. on the possession of one or two branches of the l he civil ser ice law waa placed government, while the PvrnocrHtJo party statute hooka by the Republican party, same the during period has had rum- which has always sustained It. and we control f,r ontv two war Thi rt new our f trmer declarations that It flet tenure of power hv the Republican hall be thoroughly and honestly enIs not due to eh mee It is n party forced. that the ih'puMic'iii partv has vVe are always mindful of the country commanded the confidence of the Ameridt lit to the soidkrs and sailors of the can people for marly two gent rations to I Idled Stales and we believe In making a degree never eepialhd In our hKtorv. ample provision for them and In the liband has displayed a high capacity for eral administration of the pension law. rule gnd government which ha We favor the peaceful settlement of been made even more conspicuous hv the In- international difficulties by arbitration. We commend the vigorous effort mad capacity and infirmity of purpose shown by Its opponents by the administration to protect AmerI he Republican partv entered upon Its ican citizens In foreign lands, and pledge period of complete supremacy ouraelvea to Insist upon the lut and present In e have every right to congrat189. our citizens of a. equal ulate ourselves upon the work since then abroad. protection It is the unquesttontzed duty of the government to procure for ill our accomplished, for it has added luster even to the traditions of the party which citizens, without distinction, the rights In friendly coun- -. carried the government through the ot travel and sojourn ourselves In favor storms of civil war. tries and we declare We then found the country after four uf all proper efforts tending t that end. of oar Democratic rule In evil plight, Our great Interests and years growing oppressed with misfortune end doubtful commerce In the Orient render th conof th future. Public credit had been dition of China of high importance to lowered, the revenues We cordially comwere declining, the United States. the debt growing, the administrations mend the policy pursued in that direcmttitnde toward Spain was feeble and tion by the administration of Uoddent mortifying, the ttauvdaxd of value waa atc&lnUw sutd. KooevU- (' threatened and uncertain, labor was We favor such congressional action crippled, business was sunk in the de- shall determine whether by special dispression which had succeeded the panic criminations the elective frstiiehise In of 38i3: hope was faint and confidence inv state has been unconstitutionally Wns gone. limited, and i such Is the case we deW mot thce unhappy cordltior mand that represt ntation tn congnss vigorously, rffcctivclv prd Mnnc. Wo re'"d In tn,. electoral collees shall be proa 'IT TVmoctte to low Med n portional' !v rrducid as d'reetrd by the placed a ' tt, on if the Urlted Stales, t r, rtts of capita! and tf labor tro too t ion tf the economic move- -. ! ftbut r.iithor must be upon th- - rights or, odr to f btgt r ,1 S teh com- ho p, 'de. o' 'f too - trio i. lawfully for law- i: pm to a, om alike eitlthd to the ' n if tie I, iv i ii tut both are t i ' i ll.o ms rn (I neither can be ir d.i- tri" t tk tin at. r iitiil to 't t bsc'iin nrd patrlotlo ta oM ' i", u V 'k tl y. who wtui v t t .o in l: to Pm irty to e t f uir o ogo. was tts- n. x n i, rid t the hold of his ci il nt.re t tiun mourned u i d th and it d th it ti 111 of mind and char-ri.- r h, r It tt iktieswill wi oh cuilirm and re-- I u PLATFORM TEE WEEKLY SENTINEL buel-ne- rt ROOSEVELT AND FAIRBANKS banks name was ths signal foi cheers, which were renewed when he STANDARD BEARERS CHOSEN BY formally presented the name of tha Indiana senator. REPUBLICAN PARTY. There being no other nominations, President Roosevelt and Senator Fair- Chairman Cannon declared Charles W. Fairbanks of Indiana the candibanks Receive the Unanimous date of the Republican party for the Vota of tha Delegates In Chicago. term commencing March 4, 1905." The National Republican conven--lio- n Cortelyou Chosen Chairman. haa concluded Its labors, having chosen Theodore Roosevelt for presGeorge F. Cortelyou was chosen ident and Charles W. Fairbanks for chairman of the Republican National vice president, both nominees receiv- committee at a meeting held Just after the adjournment of the convening everjr vote in the convention. When Governor Black of New York tion. In thanking the committee for made fals speech nominating Presi- the honor he told the members that, dent Roosevelt to succeed himself as while he would be glad to have the president, the delegates In the Re- benefit of their advice and counsel, publican convention proved there Is he Intended to be chairman In fact, no absence of enthusiasm in their and would accept no dictation from ranks when occasion Justified exhibi- anyone, high or low. He told them tion of the quality. For twentyflve that the friends of the late chairman, minutes the great throng told its ap- Mr. Hanna, were his friends, and he probation of the convention's choice asked for the same measure of contor president fidence and support that had been PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. fld'-Ht- pros-eere- .y ' t ! - . t t t t t . I t i 1 WTien the roll call began, state given to the late chairman, in conafter state cast their entire vote for clusion he sought the advice of both I -t ir trt e old and new members. Mr. Cortelyou made no formal state, rnent of his plans. He resigned as secretary of commerce and labor as soon as lie was elected chairman, the resig- Roosevelt, Speaker Cannon announcing at the conclusion of the roll call that Theodore Roosevelt had received the entire vote of the convention, 994, and It only remained for him to an-- I nounce his nomination for the presi- dency by the Ileimlihean p"rty When Mr Cannon ann 'iqeoil t h n t the o!rk vm! sentation of can roll tint ! to!! 11 IV o ident, Mr I1uih fore on tin1 pi i . the Inquest in New York City. Tuesday. Perhaps the most unexpected incident was the continued refusal to answer questions of Henry Lundberg, a United States steamboat inspector, who was supposed to have inspected the and the hull of the steamer. His refusal was based on the ground that an answer might tend to incriminate him, and be acted on the advice of his counsel The coroner committed Lundberg to the house of detention, but later accepted ball for his appearance at the hearing. Daniel ONeill, who, according to bis sworn statement, had never worked on a boat until he was hired on the Slocum a short time ago, admitted that he had Jumped into a rowboat filled with people frern the Slocum, capsizing It. Referring to the efforts to throw water on the fire when it waa first discovered, O'Neill told of the but sting of the hose. He ran and got the rubber washing hose, but the coupling would not fit the standpipe. This was some of the sensational testimony brought out. By the use of dynamite and heavy guns fired by men from the Second battery, scores of bodies were brought up from the bottom around the shores near North Brother island Tuesday. From sunrise to sunset the searchers along the beach and In the boats gathered In 112 bodies, bringing up the number cf the recovered to date to the appalling total of 845. s d Robbers Bind Woman to Chair and Leave Her to Burn to Death. Heedless of entreaties for mercy, Mrs Baibara Your.g was licund to a chair and left to burn to death by two robbeis, who ransacked l.er house at Altoona, Ia., and, in their anger at finding no booty, set fires in the upper floors of the structure. Mrs. Young's plight was discovered by a man whose attention was attracted Ity the smoke which from the windows Among the firemen who responded to the alarm was her son, who aided In carrying his mother from the house. The robbers escaped. Two young men called at the Young home, which is in the center cf the city, and asked for lodgings. Suddenly they attacked Mrs. U.lit akrw nhf-- part Young. WUwn no money they tied her to a chair and searched the house. Before they departed the men started fires in several beds The lit me was saved. I ittle of value was takei by the robbers. well-dresse- d i i Startling Evidence Brought Out In th Slocum Inquest. Evidence of a startling nature, iwhlch doubtless will have an Important bearing on the ultimate result of the coroner's inquiry into the General Slocum disaster was forthcoming at LEFT IN BURNING BUILDING. -- - BLAME WILL BE PLACED. , f ,r p. p t a? c n, ii-- ta - i i , to 1 o . t 1 Thirty Hie e- - Th' t ' . -- i - p I'm v t i ' t o ' Ip '! i f a t !,. . t t Tl ! V ( ' ' " ' t ' Si i C : to ' ' in '! ' ! .1 c: an e- - 7 t ' : CUILTY. i it ' t f.'urji ' V ' ' t a i ( f , ' ' t't t v, t . ir ' a e t f : - t t e t ' ring a -i Yo-t-.- i t i i o nil t! a f I i ' .tin r : " lie t P I ta ' CotiM ! ,m f.'n f Cc-- r i r i E ri'ic ' - - Ti.o T e o t p, r e i . i ; ! il n" T ."Oil? t t 111 ' n , '.1 "I - t " v ' waive its niriit in f . - tt tot"e , , " f of Iowa. T io p.i ipt s . n ,r i j, : r t t nn'ttver, who tua to ih i f " It ojl.b InaUng si nh of So .,.'i ' of In liana it, g n i The ArM mention ol Son t'oi pair he n ji" . C- DOTH CAN'T P Wreck. In vi t f l u to v i:i "M1' !t - jii- of .'.mI.h nation to take effect as soon as his succc-rioqualifies, which will bo about July i t ; h,.-tor- p, in r tv do m r $' dure th. ' t h II Ti . xv 1, 0 tt Tho V in .vmpctn people wer fortunate tn with MMO'ir, to whom the', turned nid I'.r.fidiic wh'h Irtve been iu t ' f ii, Id c d ' t I til t f git to i r I fil'd tn m ''.o tit IreMdent d t , Roosevelt ho grc.it respon ibl'ltii's thus tip, n him a char head, a lurel no p."itKm and public d itv atd public to the prti'C.,1, of the d itles to lo t li tn ; trtv artl to ll h " jontt hut declnnd. he a!0 i. is Iniself rertdv for every s't.iwn rn rg. ri y nod has met m w ard vital ipoM ttots wifi tt tii v and with tueerss. m (hi or rc of tile pei le In hi Juitlee Ir'p'r. d hv his public career, Oi .1 turn to render person, tilv an Inestimable service to the country bv In nt a settlement of the coal tv trike which threatened siteh disastrous reMilts at the opening of the winter of lira I" - for. Ign po!l"v under his administration has not onlv been able, vlgoroua and dignified, hut In the highest degree Th- - complicated questions whlrh arose In Venezuela were settled In atu.h n w,,v pv jvesldent Roosevelt that ,hl. vtoitroe doctrine was signally and fh,. cause of peace and nrbl- tr.,,lnn greatly advanced, rromp, vigorous action In ',pama. wtich we commend In the httfh-- st rot onlv secur. d to u the terms, ,. foreign compll-w- e ri,tom.-(.at!on, might have been of a He h ,, ,,.rv eri,ts, r iraeter lv-of Trestd. ot McKinley ,t, tt,e Oriet t. art! ettr position In (hlna. lerallred hv our recent o.immerclai ,r.. ,n. th th tt empire, has never been high tribunal bv which the ,i(, retention ,.r th Al8- ,tyid ,,p,td r firallv 5tthI. b'in uH'bm aaifit humanity Wht'nr boon hive io.-- rated mhloh htve r m -- if, hu pndot ha hooked made ard nnr rod otToe loen ten rod but uh due regard to In i' rnMionol obb" itlont. I'rdrr ht guMaree we find oumelve ot peace with all the world and never Inure we mro reperted or our wishes ni ,n, r rarb b' 'nrHpn natlna. re-- i nunertlv in npard to ucuful our fort !$m n he haa on equally fartun.it in d aline with domestic nn3-me'turns The c'ountrv h.ia known th.f h Idi n if is Tro ! por t t rrd c oon cp dd.-- In Hum r (f to borrow at w.ir L pr lonrr rith t'e pi!.r We fnnvM n on ck t miseries of Cuba po ".ffio'i v r wth po do v c. t Cuba free, governed tho M'rrt for tlvnc y.'Mrs urd tin n give t to the Cuban people with order restored with umpo revtv enue nut) rducMtlon '1,d pubic . ri M $rm rnnnr rt- hv wise j.ro- ed with th Vnitid vlilons for our mutual let- rest We hove ore ipt?ed the governmept of Porto P.loo and Its peoolo pow enjoy ortb r end prosperity peace In the Philippine w'e have suppress ! tbllshed order and g'ven tniirreetlop life and property a serurltv never known there before. W e t ve organized rhll made It effective and strong In administration, and have conf.-rrethoro Islands th- upon the people of largest clri. lltrertv the have ever en- - i n. i t h-- of the rhlllnoloes were enabled to take prompt snd . in foetlve ae'lou the relief of the bgi- at Pi ' In ned a fart the par'ltlon and the preeerv- preventing pg of the integrity of C i"i The posso.sion cf a route for an lath- mlan canal so long the dream of Ano.ri- can stotesnuin-hlIt now ao nee - tf cono.-otpushed fsc BoThe great work At Dr Ho ofiMpQ bv Ine P' It Is due to ranal btpon, atul Hv our possession f- j -t- 1 PnubT,rn mrfv nv ttHoH will We hniv Fnitod Ftatr Vtith- tho nrfl Dntl of In the rra of oultlvntfon We havo roortraniFod tho n?mv nd put It In the hiehoet Ftate fffiojerirv law fur the Improve- We have wort And aiinpnrt of the militia We have pushed frward the hulMtrg of the navv the ne and the protec- tlon of our honor md Inti rovts Our administration of the rroat depart- of the gMvorrmnt been and rfioiryt nr boon dl ( o r d Intention ha$ rot df hrt ard evH without ht nvo-de- eon-tlo- he i 1 : I i nt bt the cpfnrc. mrmt 1 of r hve b. e M'r f 1 o cf h'lve boon X'ort Fre- d " n hi i m etal Ami-ri- o!ii . d or'-- j iwt V r V - " M' r , j bv j i held dtxv law. ' "''.t , bis bee,, and cd t without reser- Itlnu to the c 'psijeratc Judgment of the Ametlcan people. ' record '. f t.e the hi. weep and tee nrd rott. t t u;s! be , to s, ,r, ,t r gird tn race. t.ween it' 't while Is hs n tie 0 "o d'.'tlnctlce. 4 f aoh,ovrmrr,s' the pat rirht veara m''v le rood the which the Republican party has pledge In m tl eunrehv ' efto 'tie law 1. ' J t ' r f, p,,rMVlh' t Senator Peace . " 't1 -- t t"T Me hiph-ro".- it in San Fairbanks. Domingo. at advices received the state department give in detail the negotiations by which peace was acMuch complished in Snn Donnign Credit is given ('."tain lll:n;hnni of he renthe Detroit for the dered wt.i'e th""' Tie writer says that he fee s sire we can r.ow expect peace for a litia t.me, and that the a III Mt rate c oi m t consolidate the country. The people who could now start a revohtrion have entered into the above agreement and are disgusted with Jimlnez, Semi-offici- rep-i-- r not d v T"h'oh bo F' rcf nr 1 u r f f protr o n J u t d 'c-- t) tured. and sent her to a hospital, where trephining was found necessary. Thp fracture was sustained by a fail to which the girl paid Jittle attention ad 1 frnhrVr r,iKiir'1n d mooi-M-fu- bri.r,d o ! Child Plays With Its Skull Fractured With her skull fra' itroed, s'x year-olAnnie Kerr of cVeter, Pa., has been romping and pltvlng two weeks, as happy and unconcerned as any of On Tuesday s her litt'e playmates surgeon was railed to her home, when the lass cempained of feeling ill. Ho saw at once that her skull was frac- ih ".ti tw tbrt the ripye.K tf the i Captives Will Be Set Free. Consul-G- i neral Gunmre cables the stite department, from Tangier, that Shuck Yadal has consented to have Perdienris- - and Varley and the ransom pxehnnccd within his territory, jeovided the Moorish government will enter into a written obigatkn that he and his people not hereafter suiter the ccnsecpietiees. The neeessaiy pledge has been authorized by the foreign minister, and Mr. Gunvmere expects that the prisoners will bo released at once. China May Cet Into Trouble. Minister Conger has raided the state department that Consul Miller, after a thorough investigation of the facts connected with the killing of the American war correspondent. Etzel, by Chinese soldiers on a junk off New Chuang. has made a report stating that the killing was unwarranted and without provocation. Mr. Conger will forward the details by mail, and in due course the state department will bring the suhjert to the attention of the Chinese government. Heavy Russian Losses. The .Japanese are renUnuing to advance from the Flu Yen and thre are rintinuous skirmishes between hut no further advance tf Gn-rrrt- l O u's army has been reported. The Ruslan it at the ! attic of Vfb'rtrow are tiTning cut to bp beav-te- as ''v ro of the vnri .us re n me in They are new pared er;mate at 4 000, ly a ion well informed authority lut a eMTcts the total to be no less than out-pint- i rnJn 6,500. |