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Show CUT tIOCKTWL m I1UHUL PsMIrteso - mi UTAH STATE NEWS. Dividends declared by Utah mines luring the month of June total 1169,000. a d y strength of the Japanese forces. The f Russian losses are officially stated to Watson of Georgia and Trlbblsi Nebraska Aro Chosen. Thomas Watson of Georgia unaalmoualy nominated for presiftnt Prolonged Applause Greets Nams of by tho Populist convention at BpriBK-fielIIL Ho was placed in nook1-lio- n Grover Cleveland, While Bryan before the convention by X A. and Jones Were Almost Ignored. Parker of Kentucky. Senator 4Hen Tho Democratic national conven refused to permit his name to go betlon mot In Bl I .mils on the Cth, list- fore tha convention. Thcmas Trilbies ened to an extended Hjmerh from Rep- af Nebraska was nominated vice p resentative John Sharp Williams, Us IdenL The committee on resolutions, ti Its temporary chairman, appointed tho committees necessary to perfect a per- report to tha convention, reaffitsed manent organization and adjourned adherence to the bail; truths of the Omaha platform of 1893 and of the until the 7lh. In a session lasting two hours ami subsequent platforms of 1896 and fifty minutes ono striking incident 1900. The platform then denmds overshadowed all other proceeding. that all money he Issued direct!) b? That was tho enthusiastic and pro- the government, every doliar to I a longed cheering which greeted the full legal tender; demands eeral name of Crcver Cleveland. While tho savings banka; upholds the rig of outburst which greeted the name of labor to organize nnd favors thi enthe former Democratic president be- actment of legislation for the to fore its last syllable bad fallen from provement of the condition of the the lips of the temporary chairman wage earners; demands the inltbtlve was noteworthy In itself, It was magni- end referendum; Sivora prohibition of the alien ownership lands; defied by contrast with the greeting the actual persons of men who mands the withdrawal of special privstood for all that has been apposed by ileges of trusts and monopoly, and Mr. Cleveland and within the party declares that the government skould own and control the railroads, teleduring the last eight years. James K. Junes of Arkansan, chair graphs and telephone systems, and man of the national committee, went should provide a parcels post. The onto the platfoiro and took his sent platform was adopted unanlmoudy. unnotlred. Practically no greeting waRU8SIAN3 OUTNUMBERED given him when he faced the convention with gavel In hand. There were other stalwart lieutenants of the Ne- Forced to Retire Before OverWielm braskan who entered the bail Ing Number With Lose of 2K). and lastly, Mr. Bryan himA St. Petersburg dispatch indcr self, who, for the first time during two national campaigns, was greeted with date of Juiy 6, says: Thirteen comSilence. panies of Russian troops sent ait by Eight minutes after the gavel fell Lieutenant General Count Kclbr in twice-nametho candidate of his party a reconnaissance In force to ascertain passed In at the main entrance anJ Bought his sent unheralded and un- the strength of the Japanese colimns heeded. A few moments later lie arosu advance force moving on Liao 'Yang, and pushed his way to a seat nearer rame Into collision with the Japuicoe tho aisle whore, standing a moment, and Feng Shut to give greeting to friends, he was between caught sight of and applauded. But passes yeterday. the measure of applause was but a Sharp fighting resulted and the ripplo when compared to the storm Russians retired before overwhelming called forth by Clevelands name. Tho speech cf John Sharp Williams, numbers, after ascertaining the'exact temporary chairman of the convenWON BATTLE OF KINCHOU. tion, was well reecived and frequently applauded. Mr. Williams arraigned the Republicans and criticised their Japanese Commander Hae Deserved policy, satirized Roosevelt and Root Well of His Country. their mutual admiration soand Gen. Oku, commander of the army ciety'; declared that the tariff will be the overshadowing Issue and prophe- that took Klnchoq, stormed toe sied Democratic victory. JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS SOUNDS KEYNOTE OF CAMPAIGN. All the members of the city council of Salt Lake City except two are visiting the SL Louis exposition. An eastern syndicate has concluded arrangements for the sinking of a well In the Farmington district for oil. Lewis Gibbs, aged 12, of Ogden, fell from a horse and received injuries from which he died an hour later. It Is said that Mantl City will spend quit a sum of money tunneling for water at the mouth of City Greek aanyon. The Black Ilawk war veterana are preparing for the greatest reunion in their history, to be held at Mantl, July IT and IS. During the month of June the Salt Lake Mining Exchange handled 385,. 106 shares of stock, for which the sum of $117,880.60 was paid. The output of copper matte from the valley smelters for the month of June Is reported at 4,035,063 pounds, 'ss against 4,320,000 for the month of May. Thirty thousand tickets were sold by the Salt Lake real estate men for their excursion to Saltalr, 15,000 peo-(lgoing out to the resort during the day. Lawrence Hoag, aged 14, of West Weber, was thrown from a hay raka a during a runaway and sustained broken leg and injuries to his back and head. Work is to be resumed on the Catholic cathedral In Salt Lake City, twelve members of the church having pledged $00,000 with which to con tlnue the work. John Sharp Williams, aged 24, mem her of a prominent Salt Lake family, suicided on the 29th, shooting himself. Over-studwaa the and eause of the tragedy. Salt Lake City's port of entry Is being patronized by Importing merchants to an extent even greater than waa anticipated by those who worked FIGHT. Cor Its establishment by the governContest at Mo Tien Lin Pass Was a ment. Bloody One. The aggregate values of gold, silver, dispatches Indicate Supplemental aoppor and lead wrested from Utah's Mo Tien Lin pass on at the that fight was hills during the month of June 4 was a desperate Il,7f0.200. In the proceeding . month July A majority of the Japanese in atfstr.''(he Value'of the totaT output was Jured were wounded by bayonets. The Russians surrounded the outposts of Word has been received in Ogden the Japanese, who fought until relief of the death of C. P. Marshall of North came. The Rusaluns left 63 dead and Ogdon at Rock River, Wyoming. Mar- 40 wounded the field. The Japshall was killed while at work on the anese lost 19upon killed and 38 wounded. big steel bridge under construction at It' Is believed that the Russians susChat point tained greater, losses during the purDuring the month of June the ratio suit than In the nrtlnn. of divorces to marriages In Salt Lake On July 4th two battalions of Ruseounty, according to the records of the sians attempted to break through the tut pests at the northern encounty clerks olllce, was 1 to 7, there Japanese trance of Mo Tien Pass. Before daybeing 109 licenses end 24 complaints light they surrounded an outpost of for divorce filed. eighty men at the foot of a hill and the trench almvc. A bloody charged In well known Joseph Wahlberg, encounter with bayonets lasting a Ogden, accidentally shot off the Index quarter of an hour ensued. The Rusfinger of his right hand at Soda sians attacked the trench three times, Springs, Idaho, some days ago. He but were driven up the valley by a was fooling with a revolver when the Japanese reinforcement, leaving many dead and wounded. accident happened. While timbering in the Scofield cotll Republicans Celebrate Anniversary of Their Party. mine a huge slab of coal weighing four tons fell on Thomas McKee, Five thousand people assembled in breaking his back and otherwise In- Loomis park. Jackson, Mich., on the juring him. He was conscious till Gtb, to celebrate tho fiftieth anniver-- . fisath came to his reliot ;; sary of the birth of the Republican under the oaks" in Jackson. i During the progress of an electrical party ft, 1834. It was here ou that date July storm In Salt Lake City on the night of July 1, Ileber Franklin, conductoi that the first Rtatc convent ion, acting on a street car, caught a loaded" tinder the name of .Republicans," was state ticket nominated cn trolley and was rendered unconscious held. Thowent that day through a heated camHis Injuries were not serious. paign to election day success. SecreAn army of grasshoppers has invad- tory of State John Hay. who was prisecretary to Abraham Lincoln, ed the fields between Mantl and Eph- vate first the Republican president, was of raim. More than 11,000 pounds orator of the day. Other distinguished hoppers were caught In one day. Sew guests present were Speaker Cannon enty-flv- e bushels were esught in ons of the national house of representaSenator Fairbanks cf Indiana, field, but next day they were ss thick tives; Republican candidate for vice presias ever. dent. and Senators Alger and Burrows Saloonmen of Salt Lake City sri of Michigan. endeavoring to have the drug stores Perished in Burning House. taxed $1,200 a year fur selling liquor. A special to the lortland Telegram The drug stores now pay $400 and tha states that Mrs. saloon men $l,2u0, and the latter de- from North Yakima In a vire which Dennis perished Elsie clare each should pay the same and her husband her heme, destroyed amount received Injuries which may prove A black cat is held responsible for fatal. The fire was occasioned by t of diphtheria in Salt lamp exploding In Mr. Dentils' hands a Lake City. One death lias already re- as lie was ascending the stairs. The spread quickly ami. calling to sulted from tho disease, and it is flames his wife. Dennis succeeded In figliliug thought iu the neighborhood that tho his way through the llames to til" child contracted the disease wliilo street. Mrs. Dennis was unable to cat. with the escape and perished miserably in tho playing llames. fifteeu-ycar-ulThe son cf Dr. ReyWoman Sentenced to Hang. nolds, of Ogden, alio waa badly burned of Philadelhas succumbed to his at the cut-off- , Mrs. Catherine Dan Injuries. The hoy uud his lather were phia. convicted of murder In the first attempting to rid a ear of lied buns, degree for poisoning her husband, has using gaso.ine, when an explosion oc- been sentcin ed to be hanged. An apcurred, both being burned. peal will li t taken to the supreme A depiorab.e euiiditkn of affairs la court, liy Mrs. Dan's cminsil. George vmMoo" doctor, was said to exist in Kninicw. That plai-.- j Horsey, a and rentenccil to coiwiiie.l is now In tho midst of what is ulm-i- t with Ihinz s lieatli. a veritable epidemic of wlioopiui! (Cuth in i,.'i'iiiectii'ii ait the trial of llosscy Tl.i loiin.ouy sui.l is It that cough. marly to the effect that Mrs. P.ui. family In the town has one or r.a.iv and v.i.nuia ha l mi procured poison from cases of the disease. Several deaths the llossey. which she administered to her have occurred. husband. HAND-TO-HAi.- D hand-to-han- 0. . semi-epidem- l.e-ir- i WILL LEAD POPULISTS, DEMOCRATS CONVENE THE WEEKLY SENTINEL d SEVEN HUNDRED DEAD In case the Information obtained by SHIP LOADED WITH EMIGRANT GOES TO THE BOTTOM. General Keller leads General Kuropat-klto consider that Liao Yang la Me seriously threatened, it Is probable Helplesa Women and Children BeLife Boats Horrible the Death, that some of the troops will return ing Smashed by the Heavy Seat. north from Ta Tcho Klao. Then the Japanese are likely to reMore than 700 Danish and Norse peat their attempt to capture New bonnd for New Yorl Ian emigrant Chwang. from London, aro believed to have MOYER IS FREE. been drowned In the North Atlantic Labor Leader Released From Custody on June 28. Out of nearly 800 soulf on board the Danish steamship Norge on $10,000 Bonds. Charles H. Moyer, president of tho which left Copenhagen June 22. only n are known to be alive Western Federation of Miners, was twenty-sevefor and the rest no. hope Is held out released from custody by Sheriff EdWhen lest seen the Norge was sinkward Bell of Teller county. In Denwhere she struck on the Isla at ing ver, Colo., on Tuesday afternoon, whose Isolated peak 'raise Rockall, on bonds for after furnishing $10,000 the charges of murder and Inciting Itself from a deadly Atlantic reef 290 miles off the west coast of Scotland riot, filed against him nt Cripplo Early op the morning of last Tue were Creek. Bonds provided by the Norge, which was out cf her day been has Moyer company. guarantee course where she struck on the Isis a prisoner 103 days, and during tha of Rockall reef, which. In the distance, wea con? greeter portion of that time fined In the bull pen at Teliurlde, on looks like a ship under full sail. The Norge was quickly hacked off, but ths the plea of "military necessity." Bonds were also furnished for Vies heavy seas poured in through a rent President J. C. Williams and Assist- In her bows. The emigrants who were then ant Secretory James Klrwan of ths breakfast below ran on awaiting Ths Western Federation of Miners. The deck. hatchways were scarcely federaof officers other executive .the built for these hundreds of sculs anil In tho included are whom of all tion, Information filed at Cripple Creek, became clogged. The Norge quickly began to . go are not now In the stole. down by the head. Eight boats wers lowered and Into these the women SLAIN BY DUTCH TROOPS. and children were hurriedly put Six One Thousand Killed, Several Hun- of these boats smashed against the dred Being Women and Children. side of the Norge and their helpless A dispatch from Batavia (capital ol inmates were caught up by the heavy tha Dutch East Indies) says that ths seas. commander of the expedition to North Three boatloads got safely away Achln (northern Sumatra) attacked from the side of the sinking ship and Llkat on June 20. The Acbluese lose many of the emigrants who were left was 432 killed,' including 281 women on hoard, threw themselves into thi and eighty-eigh- t children, and fifty-fo- sea and were drowned. wounded. Seventeen prisoners Captain Gundc-1- , so say the survivwere taken. The Dutch casualties In- ors, stood on the bridge of the doomed cluded tho commander, Aleut, two vessel until It could be seen no more. and thirteen soldiers wounded. The Ncrge foundered suddenly and On June 23 the Dutch troops attacked some 600 terrified emigrants were Langatbars, when the Achinese losses thrown Into the water or drawn down were 654 killed, including 186 women with the sinking ship. Those wh could swim tried to reach the boats and 130 children, and forty-nin- e Twenty-eigh- t wounded. prisoner! but these were already too full and were token. The Dutch losses were their occupants beat off the drowning a captain, twenty-tw- o soldiers and six wretches with oars. coolies wounded. The boat kept together for some time. Virtually all of their occupants MOURNED AS DEAD. were passengers and were not nsed to Minnesota Man Who Disappeared Sis handling such craft The boat occuYears Ago Is Alive and Well. pied by the survivors and which landMourned as dead for six years, Jo- ed at Grimsby was a lifeboat The fate of the other two boats Is seph W. Brown, well known in mat unknown. The lifeboat made faster rine circle at the head of the lakes fell In with the steam and progress Seattle well nd at alive years ago. Is from which place he has written ta trawler Salvia. What became of the other boats Is not yet known. his wife at Duluth, Minn., asking her to to come TORTURED BY FIEND. forgiveness and asking her him. When last seen be was rowing out into Lake Superior in a small skiff, Jesious Husband Brands Woman's Arms With Name of Suppoied A few days afterward some fishermen Rival. discovered the upturned craft, with a mackintosh nnd pair of glove which Mrs. Julia Rogers of Houston, Tex., were Identified as being Brown'. BeBrown had appeared before Justice of the Peace fore his disappearance taken out Insurance cn hia life fof Matthews and asked for a warrant for to.000 and Mr. Brown, believing her her husband's arrest With eyes Ths streaming with tears. Mrs. Rogers exhusband dead, put In a claim. heights of Nanshan hill, and drove the company was not satisfied until thi Russians befty-- It, la a veteran of tha week that the man was really dead, hibited her arms, upon which were e war and far several and then wrote Mrs. Brown stating frightful burns, arranged so as to disyears was a member of the Mikado's that on July 15 the check for the full tinctly form the letters of a mans amount wouid be forthcoming. supreme military councIL name, and the one who the Jealous husband believed had Invaded his PROHIBITION PARTY NOMINEES. home, With his wife gagged, bonnd and bang np by the feet, the Jealous husband took his time at heating Irons and branding the flesh of the helpless woman. After completing his fiendish work he loft her In her suspended position, but removed the gag that she might cry for help. In places the burns reached to the hone, and nothing but death will erase the name of the Imagined rival. n ur Mo-Tle- n ser-geant-o Chlno-Japanes- The Rev. Silas C. Swallow, nomi- ernor In 1898 and 1902. He received nated for president by the national 118.000 votes for treasurer In 1897 and 132.000 votes for governor in 1898. prohibition renvcnilon In Indianapolis, Is editor of the Pennsylvania George W. Carroll of Beaumont, Methodist anil has three times run Tex., the nominee for vice president, for state oflires in Pennsylvania, for is the owner of large oil properties in state treasurer In 1S97 and for gov Texas and is reputed a millionaire. CHASING COLORED New Jersey Citizens Are FIENDS. Preparing for a Lynching Bee. Hundred of arii-emen are pursuwhing tli o negro-criminally assaulted Mr. isjjdle. wife of a farmer, at her horn? Charles near Duriin'on. X J. Two negro u :l:t to the Burlingsuspects wore ton jail la! Tuesday night, and to lynrh them, large crowd but they wen- iak--- into the building safely. Both m-- n declare they are - TRAIN BLOWN FROM TRACK.- - Tornado in Illinois Causes 8erloue Railway AccidenL, An accommodation passenger train cn the Chicago, Peoria ft St. Louis railroad was blown from the track at Oakford, 111., twelve miles north at Petersburg. by n tornado. Baggageand man Thomas Wiley was killed several persons Injured, including General Manager 11 W. Grldlcy of the railronil. who rufTorod n broken arm. and Ernest l.olb of Springfield, 111., who was probably fatally hurL OF CELEBRATION.. Two Persona Killed and Four Injured-a- t be 200. u AD ENDING Ogden. While 2,600 peraoas were watching the pyrotechnic display at' Glenwaod Park, Ogden, Utah, an explosion oo enrred, aa the result of which twe persons were killed end four injured The dead are Daniel Shupa anJ Miss Charlotte Clark, while the Injured are; D. Moran, aged 9 years; bruised on forehead and cut on face. J. Funelle, 14 years old; right arm shattered. Mrs. T. Dowelly, bruised. Ida O'Hornett, bruised. Sbupe was struck In the neck with some klud aC a missile. His throat was terribly lacerated and death was Instantaneous. Miss Clark, who sat but a few feet distant from Shupe, was struck In the chest with a twisted piece of metaL The wound was six Inches In length and about three Inches deep. She lived about fifteen minutes. She was accompanied by Joseph Gibson, to whom she was to have been marriel in November. She resides at Worrea, Weber county. Mr. Shoupe was a member of the firm of Shupe, Williams ft Co., and leaves a widow and several children. Those Injured were struck by Ilyins missiles, but they are not seriously hurt AT MERCY OF THE ELEMENTS. Cloudburst snd Electrical 8torm Cause Much Damage in Salt Lake Valley. A cloudburst In Dry canyon on July 1 partially Inundated about a dezea blocks In the northeastern part of Salt Lake City. The water rushed from the mouth of the mountain defile in a wave said to have been more than six feet high. In less than half an hour It had rushed across the east bench, swopt over whole blocks and tom down the thorough fares in that portion of the city, leaving a wake of mud, sand and debris. Just before the cloudburst an electrical storm passed along the mountain range, doing not less than $12,500 damage to property of the Utah Light ft Railway company. About 6 oclcck. while the electrical storm was at Its height at Bear river, the station there of the company was rendered useless by being struck by a heavy bolt. Before the company had had time to recover from that shock, word came that the station at Ogden had been strnck by a second bolt, doing about $2,500 damage, the same-mount as at Bear river. n An hour later the at Murray was destroyed by fire, after having been struck by lightning. It completely destroyed the lighting system of that' cltyrwhlch- - was without' itgnis-thremainder of the night The damage caused by the cloudburst cannot he estimated. It will reach the thousands. Hundreds of lawns throughout the devastated section are covered with mud and sanl to a depth varying from one to six Inches. Flower beds are ruined, shrubs torn up, fences either partially swept away or badly damaged, wooden sidewalks floated off on the crest of the flood, cellars were filled with water and the streets cut where the torrent rushed down them. e TWENTY KILLED IN WRECK. Train Running Fifty Miles an Hour Dashes Into Open 8witch. The Chicago limited on the Wabash railroad, due In 8t. Louis at 7 p. m, a half-hou-r late and running fifty miles an hour, was wrecked Sunday night inside the city limits of Litchfield, Ills. The engine ran Into am open switch and struck a freight train on a siding. The engine and the first three conches were piled In a heap across the track, caught fire and were consumed. It Is believed that twenty persons perished In these coaches and that forty were Injured. Three of the Injured have since died. The last car on the train, a special from Wisconsin, was pushed back and saved. Nearly ail of the passengers were bound for SL Louis, and many of them were delegates to the Democratic national convention. Fierce Forest Fire In Arizona. A florae forest fire Is raging In the Huachuca mountains, which Is destroying many thousand acres of fine timber, says a Tombstone, Arizona, dispatch. The fire started In Ash canyon and Is spreading weatward and threatening the property and buildings of several mining companies near, and also the large plant and reservoir of the Huachuca Water company, located Head of Nevada Delegation to Demo era tic Convention le Dead. In Miles canyon, and from which Tombstone derives its water supply. Joseph Ryan, national Democratlo A large force of men la fighting the committeeman from Nevada and head fire. of the Nevada delegation to the DemoMurdered for Hie Money. cratic national convention, died on Mall advices from Nome tell of the Friday at the Jefferson hotel, SL finding of the body of an old man on Louis, of pneumonia. May 25 hidden among the willows that Ryan and his wife went to 8L Louis bordtr Ovlakaket river. The skull direct from their home at Virginia was nadly crushed. The body was City, Nev., on Monday. It was their dressed In underclothes and wrapped Intention to spend several days viewIn blankets. It Is believed that ths ing the fair before tho opening of the body is that of W. S. Evans, who ccnventlon. Mr. Ryan, however, concame to Valdez on the steamer with tracted a cold cn route, and when he two young men who were without reached SL Louis was quite ill. He funds. Evans was defraying all ex- never '.eft his rooms at the hoteL His penses. and it Is supposed from tlis pbysldaps pronounced his case pneuevidence that he was murdered for monia, hut a serious result was not his money. anticipated. Sinead Gets Bounced. Mother Saved by Boye Death. The presldont has removed William Struck by the' body of her H. Smead, agent In charge of the Flat-hee- d eon, who was immediately killed by Indian agency In Montana, and an express train, Mrs. Alva William-so- n appointed Captain Samuel Bellow of escaped the fate of her boy. Mrs. and her fou were on ths Mlesonla, Mont., as his successor. V.illlaim-nSmead had been in the service seven way to Williamsport. Fa., to visit Mrs. Williamson's mother and were walkyean, and the removal is because of ing on the track. They stepped from alleged administrative Irregularities. In front of an approaching freight It Is said that the agent gained no train and did not se the swift-ru- t transit' ti- ns ring Tbe boy was ahead, personal profit out cf which led to hi removal, but that ibo His lioily v ;ts thrown back with great acts were serious breaches of the rio.cme nnd knocked his mother oil tho track. tl-.- - |