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UAH STATE Nebraskan Calls Upon the Chief Ex ecutive, But Refuses to Give Det s of tine interview, ] by Stood Eight for Acquittal and Four Cashiers’ checks 1 denon of $1 and $2 are now be Salt Lake The ninth Utah Art annua! will be held Railroad Second Trial of Man Accused of Fo Murder iaduct of Ogden in Results Jurors charged a meeting in Had Been Were Fiv I D he Ballots Taken A 12-year old daughter Monroe wa of ann John @d Ju by bunch of young hoodlums recently t til she fell and broke her leg Rathdrum ] A betwee the attorneys 14 the jury im the Steve Adal called into the « I discharged and Τον u M P wast plan wl 1 io { as Sunda n od eight age 1 Mr. I no | to be artesian big arld Reports Thomas Colgan was found dead in his room in Park City, death being «16 to pneumonia or congestion of the lungs, caused from powder smoke and gas which he inhaled while at work in the Daly-Judge mine. 8 Mrs. Dorothea Lynberg, aged 76, walked into a rapidiy moving Ὁ, ἃ R. G. train near the outskirts of Mt. Pleasant, suffering instant death. Mrs. Lynberg was one of the oldest residents of Mt. Pleasant. At a cost of several thousands of dollars, the Utah Light & Railway company and the Southern Pacific company have just completed the in- stallation of a breakwater at the head of Fremont canal on Weber river. While engaged at picking up pieces of coal that had fallen from a car to the ground, S. Call of Lewiston was struck on the forehead and badly cut by a shovel in the hands of a workman who was concealed in. the car. As Caddie, the 12-year-old daughter of William Brown of Logan, was driv- ing a horse out of a lane, the animal either kicked or strucy her on the head, cutting a severe gash in her scalp and breaking her jawbone in two places. Her condition is serious. Charles H. Candland, formerly employed as claim adjuster for the Short Line, with headquarters at Ogden, is to be tried for forgery. Calland disappeared from Ogden last August, but was captured and brought back for trial. A mass meeting of citizens was held in Monroe last week to consider the proposed road through Main canyon to Koosharem. A road through from Monroe to Koosharem would greatly benefit the people both of towns. According to the confession of W. L. Hughes, who was arrested in Ogden last week on the charge of passing spurious checks, he has passed something like 400 forged instruments of writing in Salt Lake City in small amounts. Clever piano crocks operating der the names of Worthington un- and Wilson have secured form Salt Lake people something like $300 on nefar fous piano manipulations within the last week or so, and decamped with the money. Work on the $20,000 building for girls at the industrial school at Ogden has been stopped, under orders οἵ Governor Cutler. Work will not be resumed until the contest over the consiitutionality of the corporation tax is settlod. Toni Bulli, who was severely burned at Binghany Junction last August, as the result of George John pouring oil over his clothes andigniting them, has been awarded $450 damages as the result of a suit he brought against John. Skana Sarifeno, an Italian coal miner, suicided in a shed in the rear of a saloon in Salt Lake City, almost blowing his head off with a shotgun. Sari feno had been suffering from erysipe las, and despaired of getting relief from his sufferings. As John Ryan, an employee of the Southern Pacific round house in Ogden, alighted from a moving enginein the railroad yards, he was struck by an incoming passenger train on the Denver & Rio Grande tracks and bad & injured, Dut will recover, MUTINY OF FLEET. of a Critical Condition oe Affairs in Portugal, Paris—Reports representing that Portugal is on the eve of a revolution are received here with caution, as dispatches coming directly from that country have been censored and those indirectly across the frontier are. held more or less under suspicion, Both the reports of the banishment of the crown prince and the mutiny of the fleet are denied at the embassy here; nevertheless, the making of arrests, the suspension of a newspaper and other repressive measures which have been taken by what Premier Franco terms an administrative dictatorship, seem conclusive that matters in Portugal have entered upon critical phase. as | i to call,” Mr. iving, “but I called and asked if the receive callers. On e would, I came pects to the pres Ν ot willing to disf his interview, but {details to the financial | he proposed a few days | n reviewing every measure of| d come to his notice, i that nothing seemed nded to meet the situation and at the same time| t George O. Noble of Salt Lake Is s four for acquittal, and there was ing Edward Butterfield for $10,000 from the f change in the balloting damages for a “beating up” he says Four men were convinced of the Butterfield administered to him in th of Adams on the charge of murdertt capital city. | Fred Tyler, and eight were equal A Salt Laker has attacked the con confident of his innocence rs i the stitutionality of the act passed by the Judge Wood quest last legislature creating the stat and they expressed the firm conviction Five mpossible board of veterinary examiners and de chat a verdict wa fining its powers | ballots were taken Sheriff Bailey of Shoshone county M. C, Gardner, a fireman running on | arrived here Sunday with a warrant an extra freight, in some inexplicable for the arrest of Adams in the event manner fell under the wheels of his death | of his acquittal, on the charge of the engine and was crushed to murder of Boule, an alleged claim near Promontory Point jumper, who was an associate of Ty The State Board of Land Commis ler, and in whose murder Adams im sioners has under consideration the plicated himself in his confession sinking of two experimental wells, one Attorney Hawley admitted to the in Cedar valley, Utah county, and tn attorneys for the defense that Adams Dog valley, Juab county. was entitled to band on the present Max Gold and Oscar Rumstead were He declared, however, that while | charge struck by a passenger train the crossing the track in a delivery wagon | he could not state what action Colorado authorities might take in the in Salt Lake, but ncither of the young | event of Adams being given his lib men were dangerously injured erty. Ogden is soon to have a new $200 It was because of the fear hat 000 general merchandise house, which Adams might be immediately τε will be known as the Pingree bro arrested that Attorney Darrow has company. Articles of incorporation decided not to tak« up the bond were filed with the county clerk last proposition for some time It is cerweek. tain that the state authorities will not ullow Adams to be taken out of th« Petitions signed by all th e arid farm state until after the Pettibone case is owners on the Levan ridge were sent disposed of. to the state land board last week requesting the boring of an well on the lands of this farming belt. i ell the lected said Disagreeme Who After Bryan Lak« lander of t Roosevelt Bryan were in our in his pri- ! nv Li Will begli re Williams. at the near fu were Wa and \ exhibition of the Instit much-discuss¢ At i of Murdering Fred Tyler. Ephraim, beginning Short The Oregon company for Conviction of Man Accused > Byron The Weaver. simply as the plan he suggested. ν λ Pp er Worker | of the failure of the banks. Looms I It| Here, PLANS FOR FINANCIAL AID. Now it is blending the blush of rose, Weaving it in as the shuttle goes Tips of thé trees by the sunlight kissed, Jewels of dew that the sun has missed, God and content “nt and love and play— These are the skeins that I weave alway, 4 weaver of dreams! | No Lack of Theoretical Remedies Suggested to Secretary Cortelyou. Washington.—Details of many new | projects for improving the currency are being submitted to the president jand Secretary Cortelyou and are re- Only a weaver of dreams am I Fabrics of lace from the wood and sky— Weaver of cloth from the clover bloom, ceiving such attention as the other exigencies for the financial situation permit. Secretary Cortelyou is a good listener, and usually digests quickly | essential parts of the various plans | Maker of lace on the Great God’s loom, Dealer in dreams and the song of birds Wrought with a shuttle in woven words— A weaver of dreams! which are submitted to him. Meas ures relating: to the currency which are being discussed among bankers ®rom stereograph, copyright, by Underwood & Unaerwooa, N. Y. and incoming members of congress | His Imperial Majesty Mohammed Ali wearing the Kajar crown. may be roughly grouped under four unique photograph of the Persian ruler is the only one in existence. heads, a central bank issue, a central organization of the existing a guaranty fund. The project of a central bank based upon the general outlines of the Bank of France or the imperial Bank of Germany has apparently been attract- MISS |.ATHROP FINDS RODENT there will be no danger of chill from previous time in recent years. Chicago.—Approximately $2,000,000, which it is charged by the federal prosecutors had been transferred by Boston.—In the fees of all tradition Kansas City—General Richard Horne, editorial writer on the Kansas about woman's insane fear of a rat or City Post, on Saturday shot and seri- a mouse, Miss Abbie E. C. Lathrop, of Witness John R. Walsh from the vaults of the Chicago National bank to the coffers of his several enterprises, had been traced by means of entries in the books of the institution when National Bank Examiner E. P. Moxey stepped downfrom the witness stand at the adjournment of the Walsh case Tuesday. Mr. Moxey, all told, identified eighteen entries which it is claimed by the prosecution are proof positive ot misapplication of funds, as charged. The aggregate of the amounts testified to was $1,000,000. Children San Francisco.—A tragedy of the of the steamer President from Puget Sound ports. Theofficers of the President reported that when off Gray’s Harbor, November 22, three children ‘were presumably washed overboard by a heavy sea. The children were missed about 5 o'clock in the after- noon. After a strict search of the vessel it was recalled that at 2:20 p. m. a heavy sea struck the vessel, and it is supposed that at this time the children, who were playing on deck, were carried overboard. Washington —The bureau of {πsular affairs has received a telegram from the governor general of the Philippines indicating that probably 300 teachers will be required at the beginning of the next school year, which opens in June. These teachers will be selected from among those passing the “teachers” or “assistant” examination by the United States civil service commission. The age limits are 20 and 40 years. The bulk of ap pointments will be made at the entrance salary of $1200 The Annual Products of Manufactures to Fifteen Washington —Fifteen Billions. billions of dollars represents the value of the annual production of manufactures in the United States. After careful esti mates*were made by experts, John M “arson, chief of the bureau of manufactures, was able to meke this statement in the annual report of the operations of his bureau made public on Monday. The figures do not represent finished products entirely, but {nclude products im various stages of progress. managing a rat and mice farm. She says frankly she was born with a fear | of the rodent tribe, but soon conquered it when she found there was moneyin them. Miss Lathrop has at present more Groves sustained than 1,600 rats and mice of every a flesh wound in the right hip. At the police station Horne justified; variety, which she tenderly cares for his action, saying his whole fortune and will put on the market as fast as was invested in the paper and he con- they can be prepared. The stock is a! sidered that he was being robbed. carefully penned and, in spite of their Horne is being held at the city jail, gnawing abilities, it is rare that a rat with no charge filed against him. or mouse escapes. out of the wound. New York.—A special cable from London to the Times says: Another story reflecting the bitter struggle for existence of a section of the literary and artistic life here came to light Saturday with the discovery in the Thames of the bodies of Alexander Good and his wife. Both were authors and Mrs. Good was also a painter of considerable talent. The couple tied themselves together and jumped into the river, after losing hope in a battle against big odds. It seems as if there would be no market for mice, but there is a good one. At first they went wholly to bird stores and fanciers to be sold again as pets. They also figured in | window displays where, with training, they performed little tricks. Then there came a big demand for waltzing mice. Later a still more promising | field opened up and is her best paying line, namely, supplying medical colleges with mice for experimentation. The University of Philadelphia and the medical departments of various the | other institutions throughout country now have become her regular Chicago.—Some 200 volunteer de tectives from the subsidiary organiza- tions of the Chicago Law and Order league visited saloons in Chicago on Sunday in an endeavor to obtaip evidence that the Sunday-closing jaw of Illinois was being violated. The ac tion is in furtherance of a campaign inaugurated by the league after the successful election struggles for local option waged in seventeen counties of the state earlier in the month The evidence collected will be presented to th grand jury. Crime of Insane Man. New York.—A double tragedy, Ted) murder and suicide, was discovered firemen, who had | been called out to subdue a blaze in | the house of Nivx Smith, a wea} thy manufacturer of New Rochelle. When the firemen burst in the house after the flames had been controlled, they found Smith and his young wife dead. each with a bullet wound in the body. Mrs. Smith had been shot in the breast and appar ently instantly killed. Smith had be come insane #nd committed the crime. | | | may go. Mr. Good was the author of several books, early Saturday by | The mice are kept in small pens, usually a dozen or so in each, and these are ranged down the house or shed, several tiers high, on both sides of a center aisle. The mice shrink back into the corner of their cages when a stranger is in the house, but they seem to recognize Miss Lathrop’s voice and will rush to the front οἳ their pens when she appears. They require’ constant care and watching. Food and water must be regularly supplied, and all the cages and the number of inhabitants in each must be constantly watched, for they breed so rapidly they have to be continually shifted over into new cages. Often she finds so many mice in a pen that a few hours more would mean serious difficulty, and if she were not constantly shipping them a she would be overrun with them. o feed them she puts in as much as $100 worth of grain and also several tons of green Miss Lathrop began breeding mice as a business about five y ears ago and | the industry has grown rapidly. She | began with a few boxes in an old shed. She soon needed more boxes | forage. and now the whole place, inside an? outside, is fairly alive with mice. One SELLS HIS OLD COFFIN. house has been built exclusively for them, and every available inch of Is Out of Style, So Aged Man’s Wife shed room about the place has been Has Him Dispose of It. utilized. Miss Lathrop will put up still more buildings, and says she has Hatton, Pa.—isaac Coffman a few no idea to what limits the industry days ago sold a coffin he had made Would Make Chicago a Dry Town, More Teachers Needed, Amounts Granby, Mass., is earning her living by ously wounded O. D. Woodward, president of the company that publishes the paper, and then shot H. J. Groves, managing editor, Woodward was shot three times, twice in the right arm, one bullet shattering a rib and falling Tired of Life's Struggles. Washed Overboard. sea was revealed on the arrival cold. They are exceedingly funny little creatures, always waltzing airily up and down the cage floor, instead of gliding along as their commoner brothers do. ing more attention of late than any Against the Chicago Banker. Bank Examiner a These she keeps in the house, where FARM IS PROFITABLE. Supplies Medical Colleges and Universities with Animals for Experiment—Waltzing Mice Have Shoots Partners Because He Thought Great sarah Value, He Was Being Robbed. National This WOMAN RAISES MICE. tional banks, the issue of addition circulation against varicus classes of bonds other than United States bonds, and the issue of circulation upon gen- EDITOR USES GUN. WALSH GOT THE MONEY. with no loom but the Great Outdoors Slowly myshuttle swings to and fro, Catching the hum of the river's flow, Culling the song of the birds and bees, Gleaning the m irmur of forest treesNow it is weaving the peace of sheep, Standing knee-deep in a stream, asleep. A weaver of dreams! ἵν the states should individu- ally take up the same scheme and stand as a guarantee against loss by depositors in state barks, of dreams! but my dreams are green Opposition to this plan, Mr. Bryan | might be made by state security of sught, Gently, I bathe it with water’s sheen. Softly, I weave in the rainbow’s blue, Sunrise and sunset and moonlight hue— A weaver of dreams! | banks, which would be left out of the | The answer to this, he said, | plan eral assets with the have Deftly, I weave from my shuttle cores: { Snatching my warp from the elm tree’s | conceded, | of my magic craft: weaver dD wood where the Dryads run. Bi at n the scent of the zephyr fleet, ] led by the fragrance of nectar sweet, Hidden away by ambrosial rill Nodding, I rest ‘neath the tangled hill— A weaver of dreams! finite simal | whole 4 was I intended, he said, to have the | government collect a fund for this | purpose, to be kept on Mand, When: | ever a national bank should be re-| | quired to pay its depositors, it would | | be the duty of the government to make an assessment on all national banks to meet the amount of loss by |} reason of the failure This assess | ment, Mr. Bryan said, would be in- was of dreams am I— fror turquoise sky— rem the field and brook, rabesque shade and nook, with threads from the sunbeam’s shaf This is the This plan, he said, was simply to | have the government insure deposit- | s in national banks against less by reason 8 | | | | many years ago. He sold it, not be- cause he felt he would have no use for it, but because his wife insisted that it was out of date. Mr. Coffman is nearing his eightieth birthday. that ago, had nut, Gladly I offer my wares to you, Woven of joy with the Dryad crew. Wrap them about you and fee] the thrilf Born of the wood and the babbling rill! Freshen your heart with the filigree Woven of dreams and their ecstasy By a weaver of dreams! Flashes. When the Sunday school teacher asked an Iowa boy, “What is the greatest of virtues?” he replied glibly: “Buttin’ in!” In Chicago, a man who doesn’t want to buy that new set of furs for his wife gives her a check on the bank which, under the new rules, she cannot cash. These be strenuous times! When broke, read Psalm xxxvii. It doesn’t make so much difference about the invention’s merits, if the stock selling scheme works well. A woman of tact is one who makes a bashful man think he did the proposing. One does not have to spend time now-a-days figuring on whether or no his salary will cover his expenses. He knows it will not. Sometimes a man’s wife calls him up on the ‘phone just to call him down. “Where, O where, are the mosquitoes of yesteryear?” asks a Mil waukee poet. You can search me— I just moved here last week—but I know where a fellow can buy 8 dandy bull pup for $10. To ascertain the latest in ladies’ hose, take a mouse to the ball. A Kansas farmer lost a quarter's worth of plug tobacco and did not discover what had become of it until he milked “Brindle” that night. The cow, after imbibing freely from a stagnant pond, gave seven quarts of as fine drug-store whiskey as ever you tasted—er, I beg your pardon— as ever was made in a prune barrel with Three-X plug, a quart of red pepper and the required amount of plain water. Cyclone cellars may now be safely stored for the winter. According to some men | know, Solomon’s record as the wisest man is having a hard time to maintain itself. He explained to a friend Joy! he constructed the coffin 20 years at a time when plans for future to be made. It was built of chestbecause, as he put it: Rabbit in de bresh pile, Rabbit in de lawg! Rastus wif his zulu, Rastus wif his dawg! “Many’s the time I have sat beside a cheery blaze of chestnut logs and Mandyin de kitchen, Mandy cook um brown! Rastus an’ his Mandy Lick Br'er Rabbit down! heard them crackle and burn merrily. It makes such a homelike blaze that I picked it in preference to other woods. “It was my desire to make the customers and she ships mice to them coffin as cozy as possible, and I rejectevery month. The little creatures are | ed the frivolities which so many perineculated for all sorts of disease, sons affect in the matter of coffins. In their condition carefully watched and | order to have it handy I kept it in the progress of the disease noted and the garret. recorded. So great during the past “But my wife tells me that styles year has been the call for mice that have changed, and, since I have acMiss Lathrop has hardly been able to) cumulated a little fortune, she will not ship them fast enough and has been permit me to die unless I consent to obliged to refuse many orders get an up-to-date casket. To avoid In addition to the mice and rats trouble I agreed to sell the old one. “But at the same time, I think that Miss Lathrop has about 200 guinea pigs and a large number of ferrets the coffin which wag good enough for The waltzing mice she is particulariy me in my poorer days should satisfy eareful of, for they are rare speci- me now, and | shall aiways feel out mens and possess great market value. | of place in the new-fangled affair.” Mandy keep a passin’ Rabbit pie an’ kraut! Rastus keep a-eatin’ ‘Til him’s eyes pop out! Exciting. How it makes our pocketbook palpitate, as we note the big loads of coal and wood pass our office. We can only sit by the windowand let ‘er “‘palp’’.—Calhoun (Mo.) Clarion. Right in Style. M. Edwards is right up with the procession, dressing his store front with paint of the prevail fashionable colors, —McHenry (Neb.) E ho VeyronMaa SA REP IR ei SALT LARE P. SHAH OF PERSIA enerose BY ROOSEVELT AND BRYAN | (OLD A CONFERENCE | |