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Show Diocese of beyenne I CHEYENNE. Sudden Illness of Intended Bride Prevented Pre-vented Wedding. Miss Susie Brady and Joseph Cahill were to have been married last week at St. Mary's cathedral, but sudden illness of the bride prevented. She is confined to her bed by a severe attack of pneumonia, and her condition is considered con-sidered serious. Miss Brady is perhaps the aiost talented musician in Wyoming. Wyom-ing. ) Recently the Cheyenne lodge of Elks initiated a class of eighty new members the largest number to be admitted to a lodge at one time in the history of the state. The list includes all of the prominent men of Cheyenne and many of the state. The initiation was attended attend-ed by a large delegation from the Laramie Lar-amie lodge, and by twenty members of the Denver lodge. E. W. Mann, city attorney, has delivered deliv-ered an opinion that the state board of health is compelled by the laws of Wyoming to look after cases of contagious con-tagious disease, and hereafter the city oi cneyemie win iui u over an cases of smallpox to thejstate health officials. The physicians of Cheyenne, headed by Dr. H. M. Bennett, county physician, phy-sician, will petition the board of county coun-ty commissioners to have the paupers moved from the county hospital Vy. : After November 19 to expectorate upon the sidewalks of Cheyenne will probabiy be a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not less than $2 and not more than $10 for. each offense. A bill to that effect was introduced in the city council and wnMmdoubtedly pass. G. L. McDonaugh of Los Angeles, Cal., has made an examination of the Wheatland colony with a view to bringing a large colony of Dunkards there to settle. He was sent by the passenger department of the Union Pa cific. His report will be very favorable. favor-able. The Wyoming Industrial convention is the topic of interest in the state, and the meeting at Laramie, December 11 and 12 promises to be eminently successful. suc-cessful. Exhibits of minerals and agricultural agri-cultural products from every county in the state are being prepared and will be sent to Laramie. The mayors of all of the principal towns of the state have appointed delegates, in the , majority of cases prominent citizens ; who stated their intention of attending. The railroads, in addition to granting very low rates to delegates, are trans- porting all exhibits to Laramie free j of charge. On Wednesday the men of the Eigh- ' teenth infantry and of the Thirteenth i artillery stationed at Fort Russell received re-ceived more money than has ever been turned loose here among so small a number. Each man will receive about two months' Philippine pay. about $25. and a month's American pay, $13. a total to-tal of $38. The total amount of money paid out was in the neighborhood of $30,000. Many of the men about to be discharged from the infantry and artillery ar-tillery have as much as $1,000 coming from the government, with which they deposited their pay while in the Philippines. Phil-ippines. LARAMIE. Frank Carroll and Miss Lillian Mc-Phee Mc-Phee were married. Miss Catherine McPhee was bridesmaid and Charles R. Powell of Cheyenne was the groom's best man. Wolves and coyotes are unusually numerous in the northern part of Al- Harrr t,. !,: 11 J wuuij Liiia ion, aim eieiiuiiy so in the vicinity of Laramie peak. So serious have been their depredations on herds of cattle and sheep that the stock owners of Toltec and Garrett, and the country surrounding those two points, cIoseto the peak, IrWd fwawet-Ing fwawet-Ing at the Center schoolhouse to formulate for-mulate plans for raising a fund to increase the state bounty on wolves to $20. Jr T. J. Brady, night foreman of the Union Pacific yards in Laramie, had his right hand so badly crushed between be-tween two drawheads while attempting attempt-ing to make a coupling that amputation amputa-tion at the wrist was necessary. Brady came here Xrom Hannibal, Mo. - Preparations for the approaching sessions of the Wyoming Industrial convention are actively going forward and the visitors who assemble in Laramie Lara-mie Dec. 11 and 12 will find a surprise awaiting them in the display of mineral min-eral and agricultural products of the state. |