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Show ITU j r history or Past Week The News Happenings of Seven Days Paragraphed INTER. MOUNTAIN. It is believed th;t the man who murdered Thomas Karrick, the 14-year 14-year old schoolboy, at his home in Ball Lale City at noon on October, 12, has been captured. Julius Szirmay, a Hungarian, agei 21, is in prison, and has confessed rn Icivinir nn rr ici n.i i ed One thcusftu: cm; loyes or ;ho !K;-nu:s !K;-nu:s (Yntral sbuj-s at Taducih, Ky., have returned to work, both the strikers strik-ers and the railroads ha -hig ma-ie concessions. Because John Land, a farmer, killed his dog and refused to pay for the animal, ani-mal, James Hunt, also a farmer, shot and killed Land at a small store nin.; miles north of Kansas City. Mrs. Alice Goodwin, said by the Chicago police to have eight bus bands, has oe?n arrested at .Medl'ord Okla. She will be returned to Chica go to face trial on a charge of bigamy big-amy made by J. F. Young, one of her husbands. Judge Kunkle of Pittsburg has re fused to grant a new trial in the case of Joseph M. Huston, who was convicted con-victed or graft in connection with the furnishing of the new state capitol. Huston was the architect of the building. build-ing. WASHINGTON. in the robbery of the Karrick home, but denies thai he shot the boy. Seattle is to have a forty-two story building. The building, which will be exceeded in height 1 y only one a true lure in the world, will cost $2,000,000. Tlie population of Tacoma, Wash., in accordance with the figures cf the thirteenth census, is S2.972, an increase in-crease of 45,258 oi' 120 per cent over 37,715 in l'JOO. William Kiril Jackson, a wealthy ranch owner of San Diego, Cal., was found dead in a hotel in Seattle, kneeling beside a bed, with an empty chloroform bottle beside him. He had been using chloroform to relieve asthma, and took an overdose. Virginia Harned Sothern, the actress, ac-tress, has been granted a divorce at Reno, Nevada, from E. H. Sothern. Protests against Census Director Durand's allowance of S2.972 as the population of Tacoma and demands for a recount have been wired to 1 Washington by the Chamber of Com- J Reviewing the condition of the foreign for-eign wheat crops, the United States department of agriculture in ils monthly month-ly crop report announces the promise of good yields in the southern hemisphere. hemis-phere. Secretary Ballinger has returned to Washington from an official tour of inspection in Oklahoma. He says that the business of the five civilized tribes will he closed up as rapidly as possible and that he has ordered the sale of all unallotted Indian lands except coal and forest lands. , President Taft has approved plans for raising the wreck of the battleship battle-ship Maine which call for the completion com-pletion of the work on or before the thirteenth anniversary of the destruc tion of the war vessel. February 15 next. It is estimated that $47,920,S4S will be required to continue the construe tion of the Panama canal during the fiscal year beginning July 1 next. The navv deDartment has decider- merce and the Commercial cluu. While in a friendly scuffle at the woolen mills in Provo, Utah, H. D. Johnson and John H. Nebecker fell into a vat of boiling dye. Before fellow fel-low workers cou'd rescue them, both men were fatally burned. Settlers are blamed for forest fires in Colorado, it being charged that certain cer-tain settlers have maliciously started fires after the rangers had gotten the fires under control. That the coal mines of Colorado are not and cannot be properly inspected according to law, under present conditions, condi-tions, is the statement made by State Mine Inspector John D. Jones. DOMESTIC. On Saturday, Walter Wellman, accompanied ac-companied by five men, began the first balloon voyage across the Atlantic Atlan-tic ocean. They expect to make about the same speed as a slow ocean liner, and every possible precaution has been taken for their safety. United States Senator Jonathan Prentiss Dolliver of Iowa, died at his home in Fort Dodge, Iowa, Saturday night, at the age of 53, his death being be-ing due to dilation of the heart. Senator Sen-ator Dolliver was a leading insurgent1 in the senate, but he had a high admi-1 ration for President Taft, although he was not. regarded as a very welcome visitor at the White House. One man was killed and one badly injured when Santa Fe passenger train No, 113 ran into a burro at Greenfield, N. M. Stanley Ketchel, middleweight ihampion pugilist, was shot and killed oy Walter A. Hurtz, a farm hand, near Conway, Mo. Hurtz is in jail. The first mine explosion of the season sea-son in the Pittsburg district was reported re-ported from Creighton, Pa., on Sun-Jay, Sun-Jay, where the McFetridge Brothers Hillside coal workings were wrecked. The men were not working and no me was injured. A- prize fighter, known as Kid Fisher, was killed in the tenth ro::nd of a fight at Meno, Okla. Fisher aied a few hours after the fight. Forty-three persons were injured when a passenger train went through a bridge near Compton, Oklahoma. H. B. Smith, a wealthy druggist of Norwich, Conn., who went to Alaska to hunt big game, and Alfred Lowell, eldest son of one of the founders of Seward, were drownd in Lake Kenia, Kenia peninsula, October 11, while returning re-turning from a moose hunt in the mountains. The United States army transport Sheridan has arrived at San Francisco Francis-co from Manila with 300 soldiers, returning re-turning from service in the Philippines, Philip-pines, and 100 cabin passengers. Captain W. R. Bledsoe. 26 years old, Instructor in history in the New Mex lean militaiy institute, was found dean in his room at Roswell, X. M. Death was caused by an overdose of strychnine. strych-nine. Vice-President Sherman will lake the stump for the Republican state ticket nominated by the Saratoga convention, which declined to accept him as iis temporary chairman. In a fight between Gcoi ;.-,;? Johnson, a negro, and a posse at Huntington, V. Va., two persons, including John son, were killed, two fatally injured and five seriously wounded. James E. Woods, an inventor, was caught in the shafting at a factory at Aurora, 111., and whir ed to death. He had just completed an invention of a corn husking machine, and Aurora financiers were ready to buy his patent. pa-tent. Losing his hold while at work on the tenth floor of a new steel building build-ing in Los Angeles, Charles Umberger, a structual iron worker, caroomed off a projecting beam on the floor below and fell niae stories to the rcof of a one-story building adjoining and ' was fatally injured. j that owing to the prevalence ol cholera at several Mediterranean ports, the Atlantic battleship flee! will not visit any ports bordering on the Mediterranean during its forthcoming forth-coming cruise. The states of Oregon and Washington Washing-ton contain one-third of the available water power energy in the United States and between six and seven million horsepower can be genertt-ed in the two states, according to Fred F. Henshaw, hydrographer of the United States geological survey. FOREIGN. Following the explosion of a boiler, fire destroyed four departments of the shops of the National Railways oi Mexico in Mexico City. Loss estimated estimat-ed at $200,000. Two men were slightly slight-ly injured. Domingo Gana, the Chilean minister to Great Britain, died October 16. I Domingo Gana was minister to the United States in 1886 and again in 1896-98. The British government has invited Field Marshal Lord Kitchener to become be-come a member of the committee or the imperial defense, and he has accepted. ac-cepted. The directors of the French railroad rail-road involved in the strike have agreed to grant a minimum wage of $1 a day to the employes of all lines running out of Paris. The new scale will go into effect January 1. The Japanese training" squadron, comprising the armored cruiser Asama and the protected cruiser Kasagi, under un-der command of Captain Yashiro. sailed for the United States on Saturday. Sat-urday. Pascal Favale, a benevolent gentle man who has just died at Paris, has devoted his little fortune to promoting of matrimony. The repopulatiug o, France was his end in view. The coffin makers of Paris, following follow-ing the example recently set by the gravediggers and monumental workers, have gone on strike. They are only ninety in number, but turn out annually some 48,000 coffins. During an amateur bull fight in the village of Barajas, Spain, a stand col lapsed, with the resu.t that one pet-son pet-son was killed and" tour badly injured while many others were slightly hu , In addition, a bull killed one of t.,4 amateurs. The relations between Hungary anc Austria, never any too cordial, a again strained to the danger point and it is only the personal influence 0. the aged emperor which prevents t very dangerous crisis. Norway does not propose to he le'' out in the race for t he south pol3. Cap j tain Raold Amundsen, who had mid: ja'i his preparations lcr a lor?, situ n 'the Arctic, has written to friend . thai ! he has changed his plans, and wil. 'join the dash lo the south pole instead 1 An English nun named Tipping ; whose mind had become deranged a; la result ol her experience in the re I cent fighting between street mobs aim i the clercals, committed suicide in i Lisbon by jumping from a window, i The famous Hogoslov volcano, ir, ! 1 ! e Aleutian islands, is in more violent vio-lent eruption than ever before, a: cord I ing to a report brought by the rev j eiitto cutter Tahoma. j A nuis'c hall dancer lost King Man 1 uel of Portugal his throne, accordinc i to a Berlin distpach. The siren in the 'case is Mile. Gaby des Lis, whose dancing of the "jiu-pitsu waltz" eaughl the young monarch's fancy in P;tri.J and threw his heart into a passion ol yearning. King Alfonso XIII of Spain is form ing a curious, although somewha1 ghastly, museum, where are grotipec the various objects which have beer used in attempts against his person, to gether with objects which have place.i his life in danger. |