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Show i _AMERIOAN | EAGLE. | MURRAY, SUMMARY. rence, The National Association of Lette, VUarriers has re-elected the old officers, Mr. Rockhill, the United missioner, isen route States from LAKE and REPUBLICANS. wounty. Tickets Nomination. Placed in | Salt Lake county Republicans nomi| nated a county and legislative —. Thursday, as follows: For State Senators—George N. Law- UTAH NEWS SALT Legislative mA. WiLLoMany, Publishes com, Shanghai S. H. Love, Hoyt Sherman. For Representatives—A. L. Hamlin J.J. Stewart, O. H. Hewlett, John T. Axton, Nephi Gurrin, William MeMillan, Smith, W. L. Van G. Morris, Fred T. Mc- Benner X. Horn; are all been fuoded done to About and the great damage banana 1,200 more has plantations. British troops have becn landed at making altogether of and 1,000 camp 2,000 followers - Indian Shanghai, such troops at that -port. The yellow fever situation in Havang _ 4s improving, a decrease in the number of deaths from cighty-nine to seventyfive being reported since September 1. The rebels seized the town of Tur baco. Colombia, Monday. The next day the Colombian .warship Cordoba arrived with 400 troops, and heavy fighting ensued. . The Connecticut state Republican convention finished its work ‘Vednesday by sominating a state ticket headed by George P.. Mclean of Sillsbury for governor. The owners of the Pioneer woolen mills at Dallas, Ore., have agreed to move their plant, which employs 200 hands, to Santa Cruz, provided bonds of $30,000 be given. The general belief in England is that Lord Roberts is coming home to take “up the post of commander-in-chief of. the British army, which a Walncley will vacate in October. The steamer Umatilla has arrived at | San Francisco ‘ing about the Klondike from $1,500,000 and Wetrd Flame Scares People of has been an Italian re) A wonderful thing ing the inhabitants of Italy for several years. frighten- Berbonno in It is weird his arriyal a trembling guide took him in treasure from a short distance outside of the village, where the country was perfectly open. Suddenly there appeared before them and Loss of Life and Property Too Great to Be Estimated— Widespread Distress Follows the Storm. water crafts put out of service, so that the transportation of supplies, easily secured in nearby cities, is a serious question. “The seeretary of war, by direction of the dwellings, every structure establishments having to a and been sither ear- ried out to’sea or its ruins piled in a pyramid far into the town, according to the vagaries of the tempest. The first hurried glance over the city showed that the largest structures, supposed to be the most substantially built, suffered most. The Orphans’ home, I'wenty-first and Avenue M, fell like a house of cards. How many dead shell, crushed and ‘broken, Every an bour meént when blew the away, measaifag so it instru- is impossible to | tell what was the maximum. | The storm began about 2 oelock | Saturday morning. Previous to theta | great storm bad been raging in the ‘The fect. | | gulf and the tide was very high. wreek of the greal warehouses remain. The elevators lost all their superworks and their stocks are damaged by water. The life-saving station at Fort Point was carried away, the crew being swept across the bay fourteen miles to Texas City. The shore at Texas City contains enough wreckage to rebuild a city. reached Hight of twenty-five UP List of May Total Reach 5,000, Population of Davis Out The Galveston sit’ ation grows worse as time affords oppor tunity for investigation. Up to !Wednesday morning ‘| over 2,300 bodies had been taken out to sea or buried in trenches. Other hun- dreds are yet to be taken from the ruins. These bodies are now badly. decompused and they are being buried in ¢renches: where they are found. are being buried in the debris, where it can be done safely. There is little attempt at identification, and it is safe to say that there will never bea complete list of the dead. Chief of Police Ketchum is in charge of the work of burying the dead. There are large bodies of men engaged in this work, tearing up the ruins and getting out the corpses. Some of those whose bodies are being taken out were probably only injured when they were first Stonewall Jackson and congressman of the First West Virginia the nominee for Democrats of the district, has. de- clined the honor and ‘his successor will be appointed by the congressional committee. The chairman of the Picea Union Reform party committee announces that the official count of the referendum *>te shows the nomination of Seth “Ellis of Obio for president and Samuel “T. Nicholson of See lvania for vice; president. Pittsburg and other interests have placed a hurried order forthe construc- _ tion-of a fleet of ten great freighters that will ply from Lake Erie ports, via the Welland canal and the Gulf of St. Lawrenee,’ weross the Atlantié, ifon and carrying Steel. ae Paitnan, who went to the’ Klondike three years ago a. penniless pros: _ pector, was staked by three friends when he left San Francisco. They furnished his outfit. «He has sent each of them $11,000 and’ gleaned up for bingelf $60,000, wind wt first came from the north and red, ‘to the force mo- _ was in direct. opposition sta-| from the gulf. While the storm in the persons who were age, The births August in swept across has 2,761 children of reported for the month of: Salt. Lake City were was stationed no way here, of and nuns were killed. It is rumored that for direct communication livery stable at Deer Lodge, Mont. Lee o1 Montgomery, Mrs. Winseott and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller, of Butte, were all seriously injured. Officers of the Central Navigation & Construction company (Mohr-Portage road) confirm the report that the work of construction has been suspended, put say negotiations are under way ta secure money to complete the construction and start operations. An eastern syndicate has secured an option on the’property of the Nevada Mining company at Galena, Nevada, for which they agree to pay $60,000. The proposition has for some time been marketing high grade silver and lead ore. ' i. C. Harris, formerly superintendent of the Wyoming division of the Union Pacific, stationed at Cheyenne, has purchased a controlling interest in the First National bank of Chadron, Neb., and will resign his position with the railroad. 19.37 per cent. At Sunnyside the new depot is nears ing completion, a new meeting house Mrs. P. BH. Leslie died at Helena, Mont., on the 3rd, at an advanced age. She was the wife of Governor Leslie, and who had the unique distinction In Tooele, Juab and Millard counties water is very scarce and there is much suffering among the stock. Potatoes and sugar beets continue in good condition, while tomatoes are ripening rapidly and will make a large yield ; Fourteen cars of ore are being sent to market from Stockton daily. It ia predicted the camp will make a mag: nificent record for the season. The Sevier, County. Sunday Schoo] ‘ssociation ead organized. at Monrog 44,843, who there arisen between the stores. A team pulling a wagonload of picnickers ran away and dashed into a The Utah Baptist assesiation closed a three days’ session in Salt Lake Thursday of last week. |, Few localities will produce a third crop of lucern and, in such cases, the crop will be very light. soldiers but ting Z getting relief to them, and they perished miserably. The remnant of the torce of regular down, NOTES. The Guild Mercantile company has just completed the telephone line bes tween their stores at Piedmont and Fort Bridger, Wyo., the necessity hav- numbered on the 2nd. It.is composed of the Pres: byterian and Methodist denominations. The census bureau has announced the population of Salt Lake City. The total count is 53,531. For 1890-it was struck a gain school about a in ten house week, years will and of 8,688, be completed in the contract hag governor of two states, been given for forty new houses. Joseph Elismore, of American Fork» convicted of malicious mischief, has been sentenced to forty-days in the county jail. Hllsmore became enraged over a trespassing animal and killed it. September 5th the lake was lower than at any time during the fifty years thata record has been kept. It is ex« pected to recede until, by October 1st, there will be dry land all the way te Antelope island. The réport of the state treasurer for the month of August shows a balance Montana, and of being Kentucky and who survives her at the Sound salmon pack will fall 60,000 cases short oflastyear. The age of 83. 4 The Puget catch was only 25 per cent of 1899, bud cold storage men have taken a larger share than usual. Canners estimate the season’s pack at mae cases as against 900,000 last year, one Sister escaped, but if she did no trace can be found of her. Mayor Jones issued the following The Democratic and Silver parties of statement late Tuesday night: Nevada have effected fusion and nomIt is my opinion, based upon personal inated G. G. Newlands for congress. information, that 5,000 people have The Silver party passed a ‘resolution: lost their lives here. Approximately ‘denouncing United States Senator W, one-third of the residence portion of on hand August 1 of $165,610.20; re- M. Stewart, who recently announced ceipts for the month, $73,033.06;. ex: the city has been swept away. There that he would support the Republicam are several thousand people who are ‘penditures, $137,186.70, leaving a bal. national ticket, and demanding hig ance on hand August 31 of $101,456.56. homeless and destitute; how many, resignation as United States senator. The 14-months-old daughter of Mr, there is no way of finding out. ArFire was discovered in the roof of the rahgements are being made to have and Mrs. William H. Grow of Salt Lake Good Samaritan hospital at Portland, the women and children sent to.Hous- fell into a pond near a hydrant, at The little Ore , on the morning of the 5th, and ton and other places, but the means of ‘their home, and drowned. or a time there threatened to bea transportation arelimited Thousands one had not been away from hes serious loss of life, but owing to the are still to-be cared for here. We ap- mother raore than five minutes, and courage displayed by the employees was left in‘ the care of. older children, peal for immediate aid. and nurses the inmates were rescued The numberof dead will never. be In the twenty-four hour race on the without accident, while the firemen known. The necessity of disposing of Salt Palace bicycle track, Salt Lake, subdued the flames, the property los the bodies quickly renders identifica- John Lawson beat Charles Turville, being nominal. tion impossible, and the list of missing the record being: Lawson, 464% John McDonald, an old prospector will reach appalling proportions. miles; Turville, 27214 miles. Lawson and miner of Basin, Mont., who resided has arecord of 528 miles. He left the in the Cataract:district for more than. track for several hours, Turville hav Train of Supplies From Chicago, twenty years, died on the 2nd, leaving A special freight train of fifteen cars, ‘ing completely given out. McDonald was an Bishop Brinton of Union was last a fortune of $60,000. running on a passenger time schedule eceentric character, and for twenty and laden with food and clothing for week convicted of befonling the waterg the Texas sufferers, left Chicago for of Parley’s canyon, which flow inta years had lived alone in a cabin, making occasional visits to Basin for supGalveston Wednesday. The offer to the water mains of Salt Lake City, by plies: About a week before his death furnish the train was made by the driving a drove of ‘cattle through the canyon in spite of warnings and he was taken sick at his cabin and was Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific railroad taken to Basin for medical treatment. | to Mayor Harrison and the mayor ac- remonstrances of canyon guards. He was between 75 and 80 years of age «| cepted it. Aside from necessities conSalt Lake City’s bonds have been and his death was largely. due to fniluve:! tributed, it is estimated $15.000 has sold at a premium of $2,166. Theissue to take proper care of himself. been given. The Rock Island has also is for $250,000.to improve the water Reports from Sharpsdale, in southern wired Governor Sayers of a donation system, etc. A pool was formed when Colorado, say that the feud over the of $4,000 for the sufferers. ‘the issue was first advertised, the city use of the range, which has long exofficials refusing to accept the offers, NEVADA FUSIONISTS. the highest being for a premium of isted between cattlemen and sheepmen, reached a. climax recently when the $305 State Convention Nominates a Headed by Newlands for Congre: Willie Roden, a 13-year-old Salt Padene ‘eattlemen drove. 3,000 sheép over a high precipice, the maddened animals The Democratic and aac parties boy, was last week sentenced to ten being driven over the brink by cowdays in ‘jail fo* beating a Chinese of Nevada, éffected fusion last Thursoys. Some of the last who fell on the A gang of boys day and nominated F, G. Newlands gardener with rocks. bodies of the first were not killed, but _ laid behind a coal shed and pelted the for congress. - Al Fitzgerald of Eureka the majority were killed. It is stated was nominated for supreme judge; J. Chinaman when he came by, badly that serious. trouble is likely to result, bruising him. The other boys esN. Evans of Reno, regent of university, the entire country having taken ur long term; W. W. Booher of Elko, re- eaped. arnis. gent, short term; John Dennis, Reno; The eae has pardoned Frank Perhaps the strangest ease that Bia: John Webber, White Pine; Richard M. McBride, who was convicted at Salt arisen in the courts of Wyoming for Kirman, Carson, presidential electors. Lake City, in May, 1898, of embezzlesome time is now before the district The platform indorses the Chicago thent of $3,072 postoffice funds while assistant postmaster at Salt Lake, and eourt at Cheyenne. A man,. who doeg and Kansas City platforms, hold that the silver question is one of the im- sentenced to four years in the state not want his name known, is suing for ~ the bay during the storm were picked up there alive. Five corpses were also picked up. There were three fatalities tionary: Then, at once, it began to fit gulf piled the water upon the beach in Texas City. along the road; now touching the | side of the city, the north wind piled drowning of five prominent Dawson In addition to the living and dead men which was recently brought to ground, then skimming along a few| the water from the ,bay onto the bay which the storm cast up at Texas City, inches above the surface, then springpart of the city. Seattle by the steamer. Humboldt. vaskets and coffias from one of the ing high into the air. Sometimes it! About noon it became evident that cemeteries at Galveston are being ‘Phe secretary of the treasury has re-. would lie along the ground and crawl fished out of the water there. eeived..a dispatch from Alaska. con-4 | like a snake. Again it would dance} the city was going to be visited with disaster. Hundreds of residences along Of the new Southern Pacific works and whirl swiftl¥, But always it mainfirming the reports that a most deplorhurriedly aban- little remains but the piling. Half a tained its general onward direction, | the beach front were able condition exists among the native which was toward the churchyard,| doned, the families fleeing to dw ellings million feet of lumber was carried Indians along the . -goast from Cape 41, where it disappeared. Professot Fa-| in higher portions of the city. Every away and Enginéer Hoschke says that Nome no rthward.. | bani watched it night after night. He , home was open to the refugees, black as far as the company is concerned it Rabe wdo energy promises to be rereports that the flame appeared almost or white. ~The wind was rising con- might as well start over again. Eight warded. by-securing orders for 300 large every night as soon as darkness came, | stantly, and rain fellin torrents. The ocean steamers wrre torn from their coal trucks, invelving £150,090, about and that the flame appeared to have wind was so fierce that the rain cut moorings and stranded in the bay. to be placed: by gold mining companies a different shape almost .each time like a knife. Tt will’ take a week to tabulate the that he saw it. The wind, he says,.| on the. Rand, in which quick soy By 3 o’clock the waters of the gulf dead abd missing and to get anything has no effect on it. Often it moves diis” vitally important. the. entire near an approximate idea of the loss. rectly into the teeth of aegale, and ‘and bay met, and by dark Near }North Yakima, Wash., Chie? was submerged. The flooding of It is safe to assume that one-half of snow end rain. fail to extinguish it. ay INowahe, an aged, medicine man and the gas the property of the city is wiped out He deci-res that he failed absolutely| ; the electric light plant and ehief ofthe Yakima ‘tribe;; has been to find anything that could account for, | Plant left the city in darkness. To go and that one-half of the residents will brutally stoned to deay Ain his téat by. it. He-was unable to touch the’strange| out into the streets was to court death. have to face absolute poverty. an Andid: hamed John, ‘The murddred thing, for the flame avoids approach- The wind was then at cyclonic velocity, There are few buildings at Texas Indian Was 80 years of age. ing ‘bodies, and human* beings whe| | roofs, cisterns, portions of buildings, City that do not tellof the storm. The ‘pursue it have their labor for their| mserxforest fires are raging near | telegraph poles and walis were falling, hotel isa complete ruin. The office of Thir ty- six sections. of | es)‘pains. |ana the noise of the wind and the lhe Texas City company has some of finéstiiaber have been destroyed southi| crashing of the buildings was terrify-- the walls standing with all of the As a Matter of Course. west of there, between the two 'ing’ in the extreme. The wind and upper walls stripped off. Nothing re“Now, boys, when I ask you a ques-, branches of. Ten Sleep, and with the rose steadily from dark until mains of the piers except the piling. tion you mustn’t be afraid to speak | waters present high winds the fire will proba11:45 o’clock Sunday morning. The wreckage from Galveston litters right out and answer me,” said bly: destroy most of the timber on the ‘Sunday During all this time the people of the shore for miles and isa hundred superintendent, ac- , .|.cording to a writer in the Scottish| | Galveston were like rats in a trap. The yards or more wide. American. “When you look around' , highest portion of the city was four to Itis‘asserted at the Austrian mace For ten miles inland from the shore -and see all those fine houses, farms| _five feet under water, while in the great office, according to the Vien na correit is a common sight to see small craft, spondent of the: London” Daily Mail,.| and cattle, do you ever think who owns © , majority of cases the streets were sub- such as steam launches, schooners and portant questions of the. campaign; them ail now? Your SS that ‘Kassia bas | wgreed tQ:-a ‘compro/ merged to a depth of ten feet. To oyster sleops. opposes trusts, condemns the adminis‘them, do they not?” “Yes, sir,’ mise: ‘Veaaving a portion of thettroops in leave a house was to drown. To reGovernor Sayers in an interview tration for placing the flag in the “ed a hundred voices. “Well, where. will Pelciin, and sending “the main body, to main was - court death in the — said: “I think it is the most deplorPhilippines; extends sympathy and your fathers be thirty years from L age: Tie: isin, which’ will be the oe : now?” able catastrophe in the history ef moral support to the Boers; opposes “Dead!” shouted the boys. heasquarters. And who will own all > Such a night “of agony has: seldom America, and | feel that every. possible alliances. of the United States with “That’s right. been equalled. . Without apparent réathis property?” “Us boys!” shouted the aid should be lent to the sufferers in In’ St.’ Louis Coroner. Lioya has renforeign nations; objects to lotteries Now, tell me—Did, son the waters began to subside at 1:45 the bour-of great need. urchins... “Right. From infor: and prize fights; favors shorter hours gered a verdict finding the Seekner you ever, in going along the street, no- a m.° Within two- minutes they had mation received Iam led to think that. for labor; eulogizes Francis G. NewCont acting” company responsible , for: lounging around| gone down two feet, and before dayhundreds of families have either lost lands and invites -co- operation of the f° Patrolman » John Pe. tice the drunkards the saloon door waiting for some one light the streets were practically freed their dear ones or have been bereft of Southern Pacific in building up the Loot y and “Nicholas Beckman, who ‘to treat them?’- “Yes, sir; lots of of the flood waters. In the meantime their homes, and the case is one that werd ‘killed ‘several days ago by. the state. them.” ‘Well, where will they. be the wind had veered to the southeast. electri¢: sho¢ks while using the police: will certainly appeal to every one. Lhe Silver party passed a resolution -thirty years from now?” “Dead!” ex“Very few, ifany, buildings eseaped telephone. ie ‘| claimed the boys. I have taken ta active steps to raise denouncing United States Senator W. ‘And: who will-be injury. There.is hardly a habituble relief for every one that can* possibly SamueleHayes. a plumber of New the drunkards then?’ .“Us boys!” M. Stewart, who: recently announced house in the city. When the people be looked after. 1 have wired all thé York, is udder arrest for attempting to shouted the unabashed youngsters, that he would support the Republican’ who had -escaped death went out at city Mayors and all the county Judges, take ‘the life of his teh-year-old stepnational ticket, and. demanding ‘his ; hevnet ‘to view the work of the temasking them to secure all funds and | resignation as United States senator. Aged. Educator Resigns. dauglter,’ Margaret de Campbell. pest and the floods, they saw the most provisions poner s : aad their eee Prof. William Porter, for nearly 56 While’ drunk he cut the child’s throat ‘A resolution was also:passed rescindare very gratifying.’ while asleep. Seventeen.stitches were -years a teacher. and one of the grand horrible sights imaginable. ing the action of the state central comThe whole of the business front for old men of Beloit college, has tenderSome estimates place the number «ot mitteé in deposing W. EH. Sharon from taken to sew i, the wound, She may three blocks in from the gulf were ed his resignation because of his age, lives lost as high us 5000, and very few the chairmanship of the state central recover.a being in his eightieth year. Professor stripped of every vestige of habitation, place it below 1000, committee. ‘Thomas Moore Jackson, “nephew, of Its .tint- changed from white to and then to yellow. For a few ments the flame appeared to be county scheol a it is a very small remnant, have joined the police in patrolling the city, -The ruins of the heavier bricle buildchildren and refugees are in the rnins ‘|ings have not yet been searched for could not be ascertained. the dead, an! there is a large number Of the sick in St. Mary’s infirmary, in them. Iu the massof rubbish which together with the attendants, only marke the site of the Lucas Terrace eight are understood to have- been bridgehous«:, forty or fifty people were saved. killed outriyht, and their bodies. are The Old Women’s home, on Rosenstill in the ruins. : herg avenue. collapsed. The Rosenberg The Orphans’ home is totally demolschool house is a mass of wreckage, | ished. Ninety-two children and eleven The Ball high school is but an empty a thin, long tongue of fiamé. -At first it was only a few inches high. Then |. . it rose in curious windings till it a height BODIES RECOVERED TO TUESDAY NIGHT Others Waves Piled High Upon the Beach by a Furious Gale Submerge the Entire City Depth of 5 to 15 Feet, Washing Whole Biocks of Bulidings Into the Gulf, Destroying Thousands of Homes and Causing Unnumbered Deaths— Light Water Craft Washed Inland Ten Miles and Large Steamers Stranded High on the Beach. happenings in the little village and a, the city into a raging sea. The weather few months ago he visited the place! ' bureau record shows that the wind atand witnessed them. On the night of tained a velocity of eighty geur miles bring- island, Desolation and Distress in Galveston, Texas. hh NORTHWEST Regular trains are now being run to Marysvale. ninety. church in the city, with possibly one or the president, has ordered 50,000 ratwo exceptions, is in ruins. able the state of nervous dread in tions and 10,000 tents for the relief of At the forts nearly all the soldiers which they have been living. Now a sufferers to be forwarded from the are reported déad, they having been in ! prominent scientist has studied it and bearest supply depot. temporary quarters. which gave them fails to understand it. He cannot even | The wreck of Galveston was brought no protection against the oes or formulate a theory, but he has at , about by a tempest so terrible that no flood. least enriched the world with a mar, words can adequately describe its inThe bay front ne end to end is in velous story. Professor Fabani is the whieh turned ruins. Nothing bat piling and the man. He heard the tale of the strange ‘tensity, and by a flood enough to excuse their belief in its supernatural origin, and to make explic- north, Douglass Most Disastrous Storm in History of Amariea Spreads Death, i The storm that swept Galveston Sunday has proven to be one of the most.awful tragedies of modern times. Friday, and after naming six candidates adjourned until Saturday morn. | While the death list may not be as large as at first anticipated, it isalmost ing to complete the ticket. For County Commissioners—M. S. certain to reach 1,000, while the finanNo Woolley of Salt Lake; George A. Whita- cial ruin is beyond comparison. storm in American history has ever ker of Salt es William Horne of wrought such havoc, and Galveston is Granger. inruins. Large steamers and water For IP dsekoee William i. Dale of crafts are stranded on the sites of Salt Lake. _ For Sheriff— Ham Naylor of Salt former large buildings which were blown and swept out of existence. Lake. People of the stricken city are in Wood of For Auditor—George H. actual want, as the salt water utterly Salt Lake. ruined the water supply and greatly UNCANNY FIRE-FLASH. damaged the food. Every Bridge to the muinland is destroyed and most all the afew nuggets from Nome. ‘Four prominent Boxers were exeThe ‘cuted in Tien T'sin Wednesday. French shot two and :the Japanese bethe others. headed The executions ‘have had a good moral effect. Mayor Quarrie of Eagle City, Alaska, completely refutes the report of the 2,800. | W. Williams. for Pekin, For County Commissioners—James At the town of Jaro, Panay, July 17; H. Anderson, Henry Harker, H. N. a native was hanged by the authorities, Standish. having been convicted of murder, arson For Recorder-—L. M. Earl. and robbery. For Sheriff—Joseph Y. Smith. General Rodriguez has ae offi: For Treasurér—W. O. Carbis. eial novification that municipal bonds For County Clerk John James, may be issued for the purpose of sewFor County Attorney—Parley P. ering Havana. — Christensen. London Vanity Fair says itis not un: Mrs. J. Ellen Foster of Ohio and likely that the Duke of Marlborough Senator Fairbanks of Indiana were inwilF succeed Earl Cadogan as Lord terested spectators at the sessions. Lieutenant of Ireland. Salt Lake County DPoweersts. A terrific storm swept over the island The Democratic: county convention of Jamaica Friday night, The rivers for Salt Lake county convened last a me | UTAH STATE NEWS. LOSS OF LIFEANDPROPERTY APPALLING a divorce penitentiary. John Collins, astone mason employed 2 aschool house in Sanpete. county, ‘turned to his ot week feeling dled who in, home ill in Sait and Lake City a doctor was declared that Collins ad a genuine case of smallpox, and péaced bim under quarantine. Phe members of the Utah National Guard pitehed .their tenis at.-Fort Douglas on the 4th for wn. eight -day’s outing. They named their place of encampment Lisicum, ii bonor of the late Colonel Lisicum, killed duty in China. D. Napper and two-well known Loganites. te Nome last Cape while on : W. R. turned home.” Beth hard luck. They say greatly overdone, there as maby besPie there H. Wilkinson, spring, who went have tell a story that the Cape ra- of is being ten times as can be sup- lieves, from his wife, who,. he been dead ‘for fifteen years, has be near P Rawlins, Wyo., erpetratorsin recently.- one instance The were found the and east Pro- SHOT DEAD AT CHURCH. \ out, and being threatened with arrest,they settled with the owners for all sheep killed. The “shcepmen are indignant and. will) hive the killing in: i vestigated and the persons committing the depredations a rien Promt tendent action on Swindter the of part ‘ot Superinthe DeLamar Nevada has overcome the effect recent fire at pump the ins. of; the... nis station: ips x Meadow valley, and the mill is again. running, while the town is getting the usual volume of water. — ported, Farmers from Fort ‘Bridger, Wyo., Brakeman Jordaa fell from the front say that a number of sheep ownera .| end of the : caboose as the train was “TAKES AID TO NOME. to church. Forest also attended’ and| have been in that vicinity recently, fessor Emerson, and his life has been nearing Kaysville, on -the 3rd, and his after the services were over waited Transport Lawton Sails For the Far North. buying up all the available hay and linked with every advancement of the arm -was so badly crushed amputation outside the door until Howard and the - college. Triple. Tragedy Occurs at Rock Creek, A few years ago the alumni contracting for this year’s erop; one The caboose platform The United States government trans- was necessary. Montana. girl came out. Pulling a revolver he placed a marble bust of Professor Porpurchaser having secured over 600 tons port Lawton. sailed Monday on her had been wrenched away by striking some object and the brakeman was in ter in the library.—New York Post. within the past fortnight. Frank Forest shot and killed Willie shot Heward twice, killing him in- errand of mercy. to the far north. ignorance of the fact until be fell. As the girl turned to run into Howard, shot and probably fatally stantly. With all available space below Genied, The secretary of war has instrueted John Sandbach, a, avfiner working in ‘eitings Banks in Italy. General Shafter, commanding the dewounded Flora Zinn, and then killed the church, he fired two shots at her, devoted to bérths; provided with bedthe Mereur mine 3 Mercur, was last Many savings banks are ‘being insti- himself Sunday night at Rock Creek partment of California, to discharge one entering her back dnd coming out ding for nearly 1,000 persons,, besides week crushed by wheavy rock so badly tuted in Italy, and the people are takall volunteers in San Francisco, About | the regular complement of officers and that he died wighin afew hours. Béth church on Shields river, twenty-two ing kindly.to them. In some cities the through her breast, and the other passnorth of Livingston, Montana. crew, the big transport will proceed to egs were brgken, several ribs ffac- 400 are now there, having been sent “prizes given in the public schools are |miles | ing through her waist. Forest’ then Cape Nome, stopping at pit lab home from Manila, sick or wounded, for tured and “imernai injuries suffered. in the form of.savings bank - books,| ‘Howard and Forest are ranchmen who He had oS ey in the mine for tive ran about 125 yards into the brush:and: most of whom are convalescing. supplies. ‘live on Rock Creek. Both loved Miss with a small sum entered tothe credit: ‘Zinn: Howard took he young woman of the prizewinner. killed himself. The people of that portion of southHarmonious at Pekin. — The: vezidence of Rev. Gegrge Bailey " Thoughtfulness. _ ern Nevada which will be benefitted The great trouble with most of us | The Taku steamer which has arrived at Salt Lake City was visiged by burg- by the construction of the new road to PLOT TO KILL AMERICANS. ers, and six Americans. igs. that we are so thoughtless. It never | eet at Shanghai brings reports of the lat- lars Sunday while they were attending Los Angeles are feeling much encourShortly after the vessel put to sea Soldiers’ Scheme to Murder is |. The burglars secured quite aged over recent rumors of the success seems to occur to us that there can be | sossack est events in Pekin. These advices : are ‘church. the thirty laborers began te act in a Frust trated. any little act of kindness which we a quantity of jewelny “and silverware of the enterprise, and are looking for a to the effect that the greatest hasmony -are called upon to do. Sometimes it The steamer Samoa left Nome for the manner that aroused the suspicion of prevails: among of cash which was substantial boom in that section. the officers of the and a smail amount the Americans, and the uneasiness was may be giving a seat to a lady or an Siberian coast early in August with augmented by the alleged discovery allies, who treat each other with ex- lefi in the houses : The trial of Thomas Ketchum, knoyn old man in a car. Sometimes it may. ‘nen and material for the operation of a that the Russians, with the exception treme curtesy, and that the soldiers dames E. Jerikins of. Nephi, met he be the cheery “Good morning!” to the joncession | in Russian territory secured of me civil engineer, were ail Cossack are living as though members of one a painful aceident last week while rid- as “Black Jack,” charged with train sol robbery, has begun in the territorial conductor as we enter or leave. Some\2y London capitalists. The expedition army. Late arrivals say that if any inga horse. The horse began jumping court at Clayton, N. M. Ketchum has Roberts put a watch upon them, and times it may..be the little word spoken ,vasin charge of George D. Roberts, upon learning what he believed to bea clash o:curs during the occupation of and threw the rider. Blood streamed confessed that his band held up the to the newsboy, or the courteous nd he had associated with him a Rus- plot to seize the vessel and maroon te Pekin it will be brought oh by the from-his nostails for threé minutes and thanks expressed to the house servant Colorado, & Southern passenger, train at ian civil engineer named Dadouned- murder the Americans, headed diplosawts in Europe and not by the he was thought to be dead, bye he has Folscm, N. M., bide 2 different times, when her long day’s work is over. Life vessel for Nome, where the Gomkats ‘itech. The force included thirty Russoldiers ip the field, rallied some, is made up of thése ‘little things, were given into the hands of American ians, who had been engaged as labor- troops Porter went to Beloit from goon after President Chapin - He hes no positive evidence of the death of his wife, but to make matters sure he has brought suit for divorce. A number of small bands of sheep — have been slaughtered inthe mountaing |